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Diet & Cholesterol The impact of lifestyle Lesson Objectives: Diet We are Learning to………….. Know how diet can affect our bodies. What I’m looking for… You must be able to identify the symptoms that go with the diseases caused by poor eating D/C Grade You should be able to predict the impact of poor eating on people’s long term long term health B Grade You could be able to explain why eating fatty foods is more likely to make a person put on weight than eating carbohydrate-rich foods A/A* Grade Starter: what makes a balanced diet 1. 2. In pairs write down what food groups make up a balanced diet. What are each of the food groups used for? Diet and Energy A healthy, balanced diet contains : - Carbohydrates for energy; - Fats for energy and making cell membranes - Proteins for growth, repair, making enzymes and energy; - Vitamins and minerals, to keep healthy - Fibre (roughage) for digestive system function - water Deficiency A person with an unbalanced diet is malnourished. They may be too fat or too thin, or have deficiency diseases Brainstorm What conditions/diseases do you know that are caused by not eating properly? With a partner you have 6 minutes to brainstorm as many as you can in your green notebooks. NHS Direct You are working for NHS Direct and 5 people have called you to ask you to tell them what is wrong with them. You need to read through the caller cards and the symptom cards and match the caller to the symptom. What advice? In pairs discuss what advice you would give each caller to help their long term health. Obesity Very overweight people are described as obese. They have an increased risk of having arthritis, high blood pressure, heart disease and diabetes. The joints of someone with arthritis are worn and painful. Overweight people and those who eat too much salt often have high blood pressure. This can lead to heart disease by straining the heart and damaging blood vessels. Diabetes Obese people are prone to Type 2 diabetes: insulin fails to regulate blood glucose level. People who get type 2 diabetes are often overweight, or are fit but inherit faulty genes. Type 2 diabetes has become more common in children and young adults. Bad diet, obesity and smoking increases the risk. Type 1 diabetes is not related to lifestyle. It often starts in people under 20 when the cells in the pancreas that make insulin are destroyed, possibly by a person’s own immune system. Metabolic Rate The rate of chemical reactions in cells – metabolic rate – is generally faster in people with a high muscle-to-fat ratio, and in those who exercise or do physical work. It can also be affected by inherited factors. Metabolic rate stays high for some time after activity. Self Assessment Questions Grade D/C Q1: How does the proportion of muscle to fat in the body affect metabolic rate? Grade B/A* Q2: Can lifestyle changes prevent diabetes? Self Assessment Answers A1:The greater the muscle to fat ratio (D), the faster the metabolic rate (C) A2: It cannot avoid type 1 diabetes (A), which does not seem to be affected by lifestyle (A*). Eating well, keeping your weight down and staying fit (B) can reduce the risk of developing type 2 diabetes (A). Lesson objectives: cholesterol We are learning about how cholesterol effects our bodies What I’m looking for is… 1. You must be able to identify the differences between LDL and HDL cholesterol (D/C grade) 2. You should be able to apply your knowledge of saturated, mono-unsaturated fats and polyunsaturated fats to advise people about diet. (C/B grade) 3. You could be able to explain why eating fatty foods is more likely to make a person put on weight than eating carbohydrate-rich foods. (B/A* grade) Key Facts Copy these into your note book and put a box around them. •High cholesterol levels in the blood increase the risk of heart disease and can cause high blood pressure. •There are two types of cholesterol. 1. Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs) are tiny balls of cholesterol and protein. They carry cholesterol from your liver to your cells. When there are too many plaque forms in artery walls which reduces blood flow to the heart. 2. High-density lipoproteins (HDLs) are important for a healthy heart and they carry the extra cholesterol your heart doesn’t need back to your liver •Saturated fats increase bad cholesterol. Mono- and polyunsaturated fats reduce bad cholesterol levels What it does to the heart Fat builds up in the artery walls, reducing the diameter of the artery Coronary arteries Area of heart muscle affected by the diseased artery Cholesterol in the arteries Statins If cholesterol intake in the diet is too low, the liver starts to make cholesterol. Genes may cause some people’s liver to make too much cholesterol, and even a good diet fails to reduce their blood cholesterol. Instead, they can take statins, drugs that inhibit the enzymes involved in making cholesterol Statin tablets help anyone liable to a heart attack from high blood pressure, and people can now buy them in chemists. Self assessment question Grade D/C Q1: Which kind of cholesterol should you have more of in your blood – LDLs or HDLs? Why? Grade B/A* Q2: Explain why the only way for some people to lower their blood cholesterol level is by taking statins. Self assessment answers A1. HDLs (D). LDLs cause plaque to form in your arteries (C). A2. Some people’s genes (A*), cause the liver to make lots of cholesterol (B), regardless of the diet (A). Statins inhibit an enzyme (A*) that the liver (A) uses to make cholesterol (B). Plenary: Which foods are best?