Diet and Nutrition Flashcards

1
Q

malnutrition

A

Physical condition resulting from inappropriate/ inadequate diet that either provides too much/too little of necessary nutrient
Negatively affects the quality of life and learning as well a death and disease status

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2
Q

Energy input affected by

A

DIET IN TERMS OF
Internal factors : hunger./appetite
External factors; social and psychological

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3
Q

Energy output can be divided into

A

heat and work

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4
Q

total body energy=

A

energy stored = energy stored + energy intake - energy output

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5
Q

% of energy available for work

A

50% of energy released in the body not available for work (heat: unregulated, thermoregulation)

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6
Q

Work subdivisions

A

energy storage, mechanical work, chemical work

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7
Q

Active transport of molecules (energy storage)

A

in/out of the body, between compartments, across membranes

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8
Q

Mechanical work

A

voluntary and involuntary movement of muscles

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9
Q

Chemical work

A

synthesis for growth and maintenance (tissues and cells)

short/long term energy storage (ATP, glycogen, fat)

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10
Q

BMR

A

minimum level of energy required to sustain vital functions

  • measured at rest in a fasted state in a thermo-neutral environment
  • measured as the heat produced or oxygen consumed per unit time
  • expressed as the calories released/kg of body mass or /m^2 of BSA/h
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11
Q

Total Energy Expenditure

A

BMR + dietary-induced thermogenesis (production of heat) + physical activity

-estimated from BMR and PAL (physical activity level)

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12
Q

PAL

A

energy expenditure in 24h due to physical activity

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13
Q

EAR

A

estimated average requirement
for energy
BMR x PAL

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14
Q

Higher PAL =

A

more active

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15
Q

2 categories of nutrients

A

Macronutrients and Micronutrients

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16
Q

Macronutrients

A

Higher daily requirements

proteins, fats, carbohydrates

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17
Q

Micronutrients

A

Lower daily requirements

Vitamins (organic)- water soluble (not stored) and fat soluble (stored)
Minerals (inorganic): macrominerals, trace elements

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18
Q

Which is preferred in the body as a short term energy source

A

carbohydrate

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19
Q

Is bread a protein

A

MOST CERTAINLY NOT

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20
Q

2 types of amino acid

A

essential and non essential

21
Q

Essential AAs

A

must be obtained via diet

Can’t be synthesised in the body

22
Q

Non essential AAs

A

Synthesised by the body

23
Q

What is the central carbon in a AA called

A

alpha carbon

24
Q

Acetyl CoA

A

Made from fats/carbohydrates/proteins
Delivers acetyl groups to Krebs cycle
Releases stored energy in the form of ATP

25
Q

Non energy related functions of proteins

A

Dietary proteins source of aas: essential and non essential

Aas required for synthesis of proteins: structural (collagens, keratins) and functional (enzymes, antibodies, receptors, hormones)

AAs precursors of other biomolecules: nucleotides, catecholamines, neurotransmitter (serotonin), some aas function as neurotransmitters
- formation of antioxidants

26
Q

Non energy related functions of carbohydrates

A

Dietary carbohydrates provide monosaccharides for biosynthesis and modification of macromolecules:

  • glycoproteins
  • membrane glycolipids
  • glycosaminoglycans
  • proteoglycans

Dietary carbohydrate is a source of fibre:

  • indigestible, structural polysaccharides derived from plants eg cellulose
  • add bulk and thicken contents of GI tract
  • slows digestion and absorption carbohydrates and fats: production of beneficial, short chain fatty acids by colonic microbiota
27
Q

glycoproteins

A

sugar and protein
cell-cell interactions
immune system role- eg antibodies and major histocompatibilty complexes
hormones
eg secreted and intehral membrane proteins

28
Q

glycolipids

A

stability of CSM and cell recognition

eg blood group antigens

29
Q

glycosaminoglycans

A

long unbranched polysaccharides with a repeating disaccharide unit- has a amino sugar
GAGs

30
Q

Proteoglycans

A

GAGs linked to a protein core

influences signalling in matrix

31
Q

Some fats

A

triglycerides, sat fats, monounsaturated fats, polyunsaturated fats, trans fats

32
Q

triglycerides

A

glycerol and 3 fatty acids
main constituents of natural fats and oils
Energy store in the body

33
Q

Saturated fats

A

saturated with H’s
Solid at RTP
Incr levels of LDL

34
Q

Monounsaturated fats

A

1 c-c double bond
liquids RTP
solidify when chilled

35
Q

Polyunsaturated fats

A
more than one c-c double bond
liquid at RTP
solidify when chilled
2 groups: omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids
incr LDL levels
36
Q

Trans fats

A

formed artificially by hydrogenation
raise HDL levels
contain c-c double bond, double bond is in a trans formation
found naturally in small amounts

37
Q

Non energy related functions of fats

A
  • dietary fats source of essential fatty acids; alpha linoleic acid (ALA) and linoleic acid (LA)
  • dietary fats required for membrane biosynthesis: phosphoplipids glycolipids, sphingolipids and cholesterol
  • Act as carriers for fat soluble vitamins
  • Required for biosynthesis of steroid hormones
  • Required for biosynthesis of lipid mediators: eicosanoids, phosphoinositides
  • Required for biosynthesis of proteolipids: GPI anchored proteins eg enzymes, receptors
38
Q

Micronutrients: Fat soluble vitamins

A

can dissolve in fats and oils

Absorbed in the body with fat and stored in the body’s fatty tissue

39
Q

Micronutrients: vitamins and trace elements

A
  • essential for growth, maintenance and repair
  • required in small quantities
  • participate in many metabolic/regulatory proccesses: endocrine signalling (hormones), intermediary metabolism (coenzymes and cofactors), function as antioxidants - highly reactive
40
Q

Micronutrients: minerals

A

inorganic substances required in small amounts for the body to function
Important ones: Ca, Fe, Mg

41
Q

Ca

A

most abundant mineral in the body: bones and teeth, intracellular signalling and regulation of metabolic processes

42
Q

Fe

A

formation of haemoglobin
Binds to oxygen
Important cofactor in many other enzyme reactions
Important in the immune system
Metabolism of drugs and foreign substances

43
Q

anaemia symptoms and signs

A
pallor
tachycardia
fatigue, tiredness and headache
breathlessness
angina
cramp
44
Q

Causes of anaemia

A

iron deficiency

vitamin B12 deficiency

45
Q

Anaemia

A

not enough healthy RBCs to carry O2 to the body’s tissues

46
Q

DRVs

A

dietary reference values

pop-based estimates of energy and nutritional requirements for different groups of healthy individuals

47
Q

four DRVs

A

Estimated average requirement (EARs)
Reference Nutrient Intakes ( RNIs)
Lower Reference Nutrient Intake (LNRIs)
Safe intake

RNI used when issuing nutritional guidance

48
Q

Obesity

A

incr risk of CVD, cancer and Type II diabetes

decr mobility, quality of life and lifespan