Unit 7 - Energy Metabolism Flashcards

1
Q

Where is net energy stored?

A

Adipose tissue

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2
Q

What is alcohol stored as?

A

Fat and slows metabolism of fat

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3
Q

What are the 3 components of energy expenditure?

A
  1. Basal metabolism
  2. Voluntary activities
  3. Thermic effect of food
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4
Q

What does Basal metabolism do?

A

Everything the body does outside of awareness
BMR - 12-16 hrs after fasting/sleeping (increased with strength exercise)
RMR - little higher

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5
Q

What component of energy expenditure has the largest expenditure from food?

A

Basal metabolism

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6
Q

What factors are included in Voluntary activities as a component of energy expenditure ?

A

muscle mass
body weight
activity

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7
Q

What is the thermic effect of food?

A

cell actvity to move food and produce gastric/other juices creates heat

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8
Q

How much % of total food energy taken in is spent in the thermic effect?

A

10%

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9
Q

Which of the 3 components of energy expenditure has the greatest variability?

A

Voluntary activities

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10
Q

What factors affect basal metabolic rate?

A

age - BMR slows because lean body mass diminishes
height - tall, thin peeps, higher BMR
growth - kids, teens, pregnant people higher BMR
body composition (sex) - lean tissue=higher BMR
fever - raises BMR
stresses - disease and drugs - raise BMR
environment temps - heat and cold raise BMR
fasting/starvation -lowers BMR
malnutrition - lowers BMR
hormones - speed up or slow down depending
smoking -nicotine increases energy expenditure
caffeine- increases energy expenditure
sleep - BMR is lowest

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11
Q

What are the 5 factors that energy requirement calculations should take into account?

A
  1. Sex - body composition
  2. Growth - BMR higher during growth periods
  3. Age- energy requirements decrease with age
  4. Physical activity
  5. Height & weight - taller/heavier use more energy
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12
Q

BMI calculation

A

BMI = weight in kg / (height in m)2

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13
Q

BMI classification

A

Underweight BMI: <18.5
Normal BMI: 18.5-24.9
Overweight BMI: 25-29.9
Obese (class I) BMI: 30- 34.9
Obese (class II) BMI: 35-39.9
Extreme Obesity (class III) BMI: >40

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14
Q

What are the limitations of BMI?

A

Not helpful for athletes with lots of muscle mass
not helpful for older adults 65+
not for pregnant/lactating people
Does not account for whether the weight is fat or muscle

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15
Q

what are the 3 methods for assessing body weight and composition?

A

*Anthropometry
1. Central obesity
2. Waist circumference
3. Skin fold measures

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16
Q

What is Prader-Willi syndrome?

A
  • genetic disorder
  • excessive appetite
  • massive obesity
  • short
  • often intellectual DA
17
Q

How many sites in human genome associated with obesity and fat distribution?

A

Over 300

18
Q

What does it mean if someone has high LPL?

A

Lipoprotein lipase
- very efficient at storing fat in fat cells
- muscle cell storage is normal levels

19
Q

What is Leptin?

A

Feedback mechanism
- obesity gene
- hormone produced and secreted by fat cells
- stimulated to suppress appetite and increase energy expenditure

  • suppression of leptin means increase appetite and decrease energy expenditure
20
Q

What is Ghrelin ?

A

appetite stimulating hormone that is made and secreted by stomach cells. It works in the hypothalamus to promote efficient energy storage

21
Q

Healthy waist circumference for male & female?

A

male - <40 inches
female - <35 inches

22
Q

What are the 3 theories that can account for development of obesity

A
  1. Fat Cell Development: The theory that body fatness is determined by the number and size of fat cells
  2. Set-point Theory: The theory that the body tends to maintain a certain weight by means of its own internal controls.
  3. Intestinal Bacteria: The makeup of the intestinal microbiota can change when body weight changes, as the microbiota may influence energy balance.
23
Q

What is the difference between hunger and appetite?

A

Hunger is natural
Appetite is learned

24
Q

What is the different between satiation and satiety?

A

Satiation tells us to stop eating and builds through the meal

Satiety reminds us not to start eating again- after we have eaten

25
Q

What are the risks of taking health products for weight loss?

A

1.They are not regulated so can have all kinds of things dangerous for consumption without oversight - can have serious health risks
2.using other weight loss products or how they interact with medications
3.age and risk factor dependent
4.don’t order stuff online that a HCP has not given you and has not examined you
5.Don’t take them together without discussing with HCP
6buying from unreliable sources
7don’t use stuff “off label” - what it’s not intended for
8 natural does not mean safe

26
Q

Which is more powerful, hunger or satiety?

A

Hunger

27
Q

What is the most satiating nutrient?

A

Protein

28
Q

What is a weight normative approach?

A

A weight normative approach focuses on weight loss / management to prevent and treat health problems

29
Q

What is a weight inclusive approach?

A

A weight inclusive approach takes the focus off of a patients weight and focuses more on overall health.

30
Q

What is behaviour modification?

A

focuses on taking a look at the cues that are causing behaviours which are resulting in consequences.

  • ie) sitting in front of the tv might be a cue to eat chips. so maybe need to change the cue and the behaviour to change the consequence.