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Nutrition Basics • Food defined culturally: – A person’s diet is the result of: • Genetics - taste ability (PTC test) • Personal life experiences • Culture • Nutrients: biological requirement Nutrition Basics • Nutrients: biological requirement – – – – – – Carbohydrates Protein - amino acids Lipids - oils and fats Vitamins Minerals Water Nutrition Basics • Role of Food/ nutrients – Food - supplies nutrients: carbohydrate, protein, vitamin, mineral, fat/oils – Food/nutrients important for: growth, development, reproduction etc – Food/nutrition plays a major role in human adaptation because: • it is an independent stressor • modifier of other stressors (disease) Nutrition Basics • Nutrients function to: – – – – Sustain life Promote growth Replace loss Provide energy: • growth, maintenance, work, respiration, reproduction Energy Intake • • • • • Food freq. quest. 24-hr recall Food records Food weighing Direct observation Energy Expenditure • Gas exchange calorimetry • Heart rate monitoring • Estimated from activity – Motion sensors – Activity diary – Direct observation • Doubly labeled water (D218O) Nutritional Status • Clinical exam: – – – – – – Skin Nails Hair Eyes Mouth Thyroid Macronutrients • Protein • Carbohydrate • Lipids (fats & oils) Protein • structural materials • enzymes hormones • source of amino acids used to make protein in the body • contributes to immune function • can provide some energy can make glucose from amino acids • 20 aa used in human protein – 9 are essential (they must be obtained from food). Complete protein contain all essential aa Carbohydrates • Historically nutritionists have classified carbohydrates as either simple or complex, however, the exact delineation of these categories is ambiguous. • Today, simple carbohydrate typically refers to monosaccharides and disaccharides complex carbohydrate means polysacchrides (and oligosaccharides). Carbohydrates: major functions 1. Providing energy and regulation of blood glucose 2. Sparing the use of proteins for energy 3. Breakdown of fatty acids and preventing ketosis 4. correct working of our brain, heart and nervous, digestive and immune systems. 5. Fiber, which is also a form of carbohydrate, is essential for the elimination of waste materials and toxins Lipds: Fats & Oils • Production of fatty acids for the production of phospholipids – in structure of cell membranes. • Cholesterol is also made from fatty acids and is used for prod of sex and adrenal hormones. • Lubrication, especially in joints and around muscles. • Temperature regulation through the insulation they provide. They are also important for the transport of certain vitamins (fat-soluble vitamins). Types of Malnutrition 1. Undernutrition A. Kwashiorkor B. Marasmus C. Micronutrient deficiencies 2. Over-nutrition Vitamins • Catalysts for metabolic processes • Required in small quantities • Absorption mechanisms – fat soluble (A, D, E, K) – water soluble (C, B complex) • Storage capacity – greatest for fat soluble vitamins, with potential for overdosage • Food sources Vitamin A Deficinecy • Night blindness,(earliest manifestation) – rhodopsin reduced in rods – reduced ability to see in dim light • Early eye lesions – conjunctival xerosis • conjunctiva becomes dry, thickened, wrinkled, pigmented, loses shiny luster – Bitot’s spots • bilateral, triangular, raised whitish plaques • plaques appear as fine foam with bubbles Epidemiology-Vitamin A Deficiency • Distribution – Poor, rice-eating populations world wide – W. Africa-spared; red palm oil, those eating small, (entire), fish spared as vit A concentrates in liver – Affluent societies; alcoholics, malabsorbtion • Prevalence – 251 million children <5 years with mild to moderate deficiency – 2-3 million children with xerophthalmia • >50% become blind or have serious visual damage • significant mortality from infection, decreased immunity and decreased epithelial integrity SCURVY • Scurvy is the term to describe ascorbic acid or vitamin C deficiency in the diet, manifest by – weakness, – anemia, – spongy swollen gums, • James Lind a British naval surgeon born 1739, is credited with having empirically evaluated the effect of diet on scurvy, (the first reported controlled clinical trial!) Vitamin D Deficiency Rickets: childhood • Dental changes in childhood rickets – delayed dental eruption • small, pointed teeth • susceptible to early caries • Complications – growth retardation – pulmonary infection – high childhood mortality Osteomalacia: adults Prevention-Vitamin D Deficiency •Sunlight- education re: swaddling •Vitamin D supplementation –prophylactic supplementation of the institutionalized Summary- Vit D deficiency • Rickets- childhood • Osteomalacia- adults •Primary skeletal changes due to bone softening •Lack of cutaneous synthesis or intake and utilization of Vit D required for calcium absorbtion Pellagra Diagnosis • Clinical- Four D’s – dermatitis, diarrhea, dementia, death • Laboratory – urine N’-methylnicotinamide PELLAGRA • Clinical Presentation – Dermatitis • confluent over sun exposed areas • collar of Casal, dermatosis around neck – Progression • erythema, desquamation, hyperpigmentation, atrophy – Seasonality • worst after sun exposure PELLAGRA MANIFESTATIONS • Gastrointestinal – stomatitis, glossitis, gastritis, enteritis, malabsorbtion (edematous, painful mucosa, desquamation, glossy- scarlet tongue) • Neuropsychiatric (late stage) – confusion, irritability – depression, delusions, suicidal ideation • there were asylums in the southern US for victims of central nervous system pellagra/ niacin deficiency Mineral Deficiencies • • • • Iron- anemia Iodine- goiter Fluoride-caries Trace elements Iron Metabolism • Etiology – insufficient dietary iron (most common) • absorbtion/binding may be affected – anemia from blood loss • hookworm and other parasites in developing world • Prevalence – ~50% of developing world may have iron deficiency – 56 - 70% of pregnant women in developing world • compared to 18% of pregnant women in developed world • associated with 50% of maternal deaths, retards fetal growth – 60% of children < 5 yrs in developing world ANEMIA Definition • Anemia is defined as a decrease in the concentration of circulating red blood cells or in the hemoglobin concentration and a concomitant impaired capacity to transport oxygen. WHO Diagnosis • Hemoglobin below 12gm/dl in non pregnant females, 11gm/dl for pregnant women, 11gm/dl in pre school children. • Etiology – insufficient dietary iron (most common) • absorbtion /binding may be affected – anemia from blood loss • hookworm and other parasites in developing world 27 High Iron Bioavailability • • • • • Blood products Beef, pork, chicken, fish Liver, spleen, kidney Oysters, clams, mussels Spinach, alfalfa shoots Good Iron Content • • • • • • • Whole grains Bean, peas, soybeans, chickpeas Seeds (pumpkin, sesame, sunflower) Blackstrap molasses Peanuts, betel nuts, dates, raisins Egg yolk Crickets, termites, grasshoppers Iron Deficiency • Insufficient intake – poor and vegan diet – malabsorbtion • Blood loss – pregnancies – parasites; hookworms, schistosomes, malaria Clinical Manifestations • Mild anemia – diffuse, non-specific symptoms, pallor • Moderate anemia – glossitis, anorexia, heartburn, constipation, fatigue – Pica, bizarre food cravings, (ingeation of clay, or ice • Severe anemia – congestive heart failure, (high output) – maternal morbidity/mortality – susceptibility to infection Iodine Deficiency: Goiter Iodine Deficiency • Requirement- sources – 150 micrograms/day in adolescent and adults – seafood, soil, milk products – iodized salt, 60% of world’s salt is iodized, but not targeted to those at risk • Prevalence – – – – 1 billion at risk 655 million with goiter 11 million with cretinism high mountainous areas; away from sea Goiter Treatment & Prevention • Iodine intake – iodized salt – iodized oil Endemic Cretinism • Severe iodine deficiency • S.America, Asia, South Pacific •Related to maternal hypothyroidism • Neurologic developmental damage • Mental retardation, deaf-mutism, •Short stature, thick skin,protuberant thick tongue, shuffling gait Trace elements-fluoride • Fluoride – mineral nutrient for teeth & skeleton • Deficiency – dental caries Common Nutrition-Related Problems • • • • Arteriosclerotic heart disease Hypertension Diabetes Morbid obesity Important Nutritional Problems • • • • Protein-energy malnutrition Nutritional anemias Vitamin A deficiency (xerophthalmia) Iodine deficiency disorders