Lecture 20 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two types of minerals?

A

Major and Trace.

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2
Q

Describe Major Minerals?

A

Minerals present in amounts larger than 5g (a teaspoon). A pound is about 454g; thus only calcium and phosphorous appear in amounts larger than a pound.

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3
Q

Describe trace minerals?

A

There are more than a dozen trace minerals.

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4
Q

Describe the function of iron containing haemoglobin?

A

Hb is a metalloprotein with heme, and orion porphyrin, attached to the protein moiety. The iron combines with the oxygen in the lungs, where the concentration is high, and releases the oxygen in the tissues where it is needed.

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5
Q

Describe the function of iron containing myoglobin?

A

Within the muscle cell has a function similar to haemoglobin.

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6
Q

Describe the function of iron containing cytochromes?

A

Transfer of electrons and storage of energy through alternate oxidation and reduction of iron (Fe2+ -> Fe 3+).

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7
Q

How much iron is recycled daily?

A

20-25mg iron is recycled daily and used for RBC information.

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8
Q

How much iron is required to be absorbed daily?

A

1-2mg iron is required to be absorbed daily to replace losses.

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9
Q

What is the bioavailability of iron?

A

Low. However it is variable depending on physiological factors and dietary factors.

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10
Q

How much iron can we store in our RBC?

A

2500mg.

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11
Q

How much iron can we store in plasma?

A

4mg.

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12
Q

How much iron do we loose in a day?

A

1-2mg. It is lost through the gut enterocyte.

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13
Q

Describe the 1st step of iron recycling?

A

Transferrin carries iron in blood. Some iron is then delivered to myoglobin of muscle cells.

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14
Q

Describe the 2nd step of iron recycling?

A

Bone marrow incorporates iron into haemoglobin of RBCs and stores excess iron in ferritin (and hemosiderin).

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15
Q

Describe the 3rd step of iron recycling?

A

Iron-Congaing haemoglobin in RBC carries oxygen. Some iron is lost if bleeding occurs.

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16
Q

Describe the 4th step of iron recycling?

A

Liver (and spleen) dismantles RBCs, packages iron into transferrin, and stores excess iron in ferritin (and hemosiderin).

17
Q

Describe the 1st step of iron absorption?

A

Take iron into the stomach through food.

18
Q

Describe the 2nd step of iron absorption?

A

Mucosal cells in the SI store excess iron in mucosal ferritin (a storage protein). They’ll only release iron if our body needs it.

19
Q

Describe the 3a step of iron absorption?

A

If the body does not need iron, iron is excreted in shed intestinal cells.

20
Q

Describe the 3b step of iron absorption?

A

If the body needs iron, the mucosal ferritin releases iron to mucosal transferrin (transport protein), which hands off iron to another transferrin that travels through the blood to the rest of the body.

21
Q

What happens when RBC life is over?

A

Macrophages dismantle the RBC and take the iron from the RBC and then release the iron.

22
Q

What is the master regulatory controller?

A

Hepsidin. Hormone produced by the liver.

23
Q

Where do we get non-heme iron from?

A

Foods derived from plants.

24
Q

Where do we get heme iron from?

A

Only foods derived form animal flesh, however they do contain non-heme iron as well.

25
Q

What actors enhance non-heme iron absorption?

A
  1. MPF factor.
  2. Vitamin C.
  3. Citric acid from foods.
  4. Lactic acids from foods.
  5. HCl from stomach.
  6. Sugars.
26
Q

What factors inhibit non-heme absorption?

A
  1. Phytates - find in wholegrain foods.
  2. Fibres.
  3. Oxalates - spinach, iron is bound to oxalate and doesn’t allow it be solubilised by the enterocytes.
  4. Calcium - bind to non-heme iron.
  5. Phosphorus.
  6. Polyphenols.
  7. Tannins - from tea and binds wiht non-heme iron and prevents it from being absorbed.
27
Q

Where else can you get iron from?

A
  1. Contamination iron - i.e. skillets, iron would leak from the pans.
  2. Iron supplements - diagnosed with iron deficiency, will be put on these. Usually 300mg and come with Vitamin C. The problem of this it can cause gut disturbance i.e. constipation or diarrhoea.
28
Q

What is the RDI of iron?

A

It all depends on the age you are. Iron increases during infancy to 11mg, then decreases then increases during menstruation and pregnancy.

29
Q

What are the 3 stages of iron deficiency in an adult?

A
  1. Depleted storage iron - Serum ferritin drops
30
Q

What happens in our body in iron deficiency?

A

Always deplete our body iron status first to have enough RBC, so bye he time we are at the stage 3. We have low amounts of iron.

31
Q

What do the RBC look like in iron-deficiency anaemia?

A

Pale, small RBC. Microcytic anaemia.

32
Q

What is iron vital for?

A

Myelination. Neuronal growth and differentiation and neurotransmitter regulation.

33
Q

What is the RDI for pregnant woman (aged 14-50yo)?

A

27mg/d. No routine supplementation in NZ - always take a blood test at first check up. Fe supplements on diagnosis of Fe-def anaemia and under supervision of LMC. The problem is that there are adverse side affects in the gut. A lot of women then stop taking the supplements.

34
Q

What are the significant sources of iron?

A

Red meats, fish poultry, shellfish, eggs, legumes and dried fruits.