Nutrition Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 2 functions of nutrients?

A

provide energy - macronutrients

“essential” molecules

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2
Q

what make up the macromolecules?

A

carbs
fats
proteins

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3
Q

what make up the essential molecules/micronutrients?

A

vitamins
minerals
essential aa
essential fatty acids

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4
Q

what 3 factors make up the dailt energy expendature (DEE)?

A
  1. BMR/RMR
  2. physical activity
  3. energy required to process food (thermogenesis)
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5
Q

what factors affect RMR/BMR?

A
gender
body temperature
environmental temperature
thyroid function
pregnancy/lactation
age
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6
Q

what is Diet-induced Thermogenesis (DIT)?

A

the energy required to digest, absorb, distribute and store nutrients - about 10% of RMR/day

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7
Q

what are the percentages of caloric intake from macronutrients?

A

carbs - 50% - most important
Fat - 30%
protein - 20%

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8
Q

what is the energy contribution of carbohydrates, protein, fat and alcohol (kcal/g)?

A

4
4
9
7

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9
Q

what are the 3 categories of carnohydrates?

A

monosaccharides
disaccharides
polysaccharides

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10
Q

what are sources of monosaccharides?

A

glucose
fructose
- fruits, sweet corn, corn syrup, honey

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11
Q

what are sources of dissaccharides?

A

sucrose - table sugar
lactose -milk sugar
maltose - in beer and malt liquors

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12
Q

what makes up sucrose?

A

glucose and fructose

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13
Q

what makes up lactose?

A

glucose and galactose

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14
Q

what makes up maltose?

A

glucose and glucose

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15
Q

what are sources of polysaccharides?

A

complex carbs - polymers of glucose
do NOT have a sweet taste
Starches - found in plants
-wheat, grains, potatoes, dried peas, beans, vegetables.

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16
Q

how are polysaccharides classified?

A

base on how they affect blood glucose levels

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17
Q

what is glycemic index?

A

time course of rise and decline of blood glucose after a meal

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18
Q

what does fiber contain?

A

non-digestable carbs
includes cellulose, lignin, pectin
Does not provide energy

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19
Q

what could too much fiber do?

A

decrease absorption of fat-soluble vitamins and bind to trace elements like zinc

20
Q

what are the most important class of dietary fat from an energy perspective?

A

TAGs

21
Q

what percentage of total dietary lipid does TAGs contribute?

A

90%

22
Q

which plant sources do not have a source of unsaturated FA (good kind) and more saturated (bad)?

A

coconut oil
pal oil exceptions
maybe good for skin

23
Q

what provides the essential FA?

A

linoleic and alpha linolenic acids

24
Q

when does arachidonic acid become essential?

A

if or when linoleic acid is insufficient/deficient

25
Q

what are EFA required for?

A

membrane fluidity and synthesis of eicosanoids

26
Q

what are deficiency of EFAs characterized by (not common)?

A

scaly dermatitis
hair loss
poor wound healing

27
Q

whats the general dietary goal when it comes to fats?

A

decrease saturated fat (TAGs)

increase mono or poly unsaturated FA

28
Q

what cannot be stored?

A

amino acids

29
Q

what is the function of proteins?

A

replenish body proteins

required for essential aa

30
Q

what proteins have a high biological value?

A

proteins from animal sources

31
Q

what does high biological value mean?

A

contain high amounts of essential aa required for synthesis of human tissue

32
Q

what has a low biological value?

A

gelatin

33
Q

when is nitrogen intake greater than nitrogen excretion [positive nitrogen balance]?

A

when tissue growth is occurring - growing kids, pregnancy, during recovery from surgery/trauma

34
Q

what balanceare healthy individuals in?

A

nitrogen balance

35
Q

when is nitrogen excretion greater than nitrogen intake [negative nitrogen balance]?

A

inadequate deitary protein
lack of essential aa
physiology stress - trauma, burns, illness, surgery

36
Q

what are some diseases greatly influenced by?

A

diet

37
Q

what is the major contributor of serum cholesterol?

A

LDL - from TAGs and VLDL

38
Q

what kind of effect does reducing dietary cholesterol have on serum cholesterol?

A

little effect!

39
Q

how can you reduce serum cholesterol?

A
  1. reduce saturated FA (TAGs), increase mono and poly unsaturated FA
  2. decrease de novo synthesis of cholesterol by statins or something else
40
Q

what are the long term signals of hormonal regulation of weight and energy?

A

leptin

insulin

41
Q

where is leptin produced? what is it?

A

adipose tissue

produced proportionally to fat cell density and plays a key role in weight gain, appetite suppression and energy expenditure through its actions on the HYPOTHALAMUS!

it also regulated inflammatory responses, blood pressure and bone density

42
Q

what does insulin do?

A

similar to leptin

dampens appetite by exerting its effects on the HYPOTHALAMUS

43
Q

what are the short term signals of hormonal regulation of appetite?

A

ghrelin

CCK

44
Q

what is Ghrelin?

A

secreted by endocrine cells of stomach
increase the release of NPY - which enhances appetite and food intake

ghrelin release is activated by fasting and low glucose

inhibited by high glucose

45
Q

what is CCK

A

+ PPY cause satiety during a meal and transmit those signals to the HYPOTHALAMUS