Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Nutrition Basics
- MACRONUTRIENTS
- Fats & Oils (Lipids)
Anmerkungen:
- Triglyceride: glycerol
molecule + 3 chains of
fatty acids (storage
form)
- Highly saturated: solid at room temp.
Unsaturated: liquid at room temp
Anmerkungen:
- Animals: saturated (fat);
Plants: unsaturated or
polyunsaturated (oil)
- polyunsaturated vegetable oils
are linked to an increased
incidence of cancer
- often go rancid; oxygen becomes
reactive (free radicals) and binds to
and damages important nutrients
Anmerkungen:
- protect against free radicals with
antioxidants like vitamins C and E
- Cholesterol: waxy, fat-like
(not triglyceride)
Anmerkungen:
- too much cholesterol can create plaque deposits in the arteries
(arteriosclerosis), which can narrow blood vessels & even kill
portions of the heart muscle (MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION or
CORONARY)
- Component of nerve tissue
- base from which estrogen, cortisone and
testosterone are made
- Cholesterol salts ("bile salts") promote the mixture of fats
in the small intestine with water so they can break down
and be absorbed through intestinal wall
- lecithin in beans, peas, etc can
help lower blood cholesterol
- Provide insulation,
absorb shock, help
absorb fat-soluble
vitamins
- Trans fatty acids happen
during hydrogenation
(breaking double bonds,
adding hydrogen,
increasing melting point
& shelf life)
- ex; margarine & processed & fried
foods
- too many trans fats in the diet raises cholesterol
and is associate with heart disease, stroke, type 2
diabetes
- Carbohydrates
- * Provides energy for the body; *
stored glucose is called glycogen; *
"HUNGER" is felt when blood sugar
(glucose) levels drop
Anmerkungen:
- glycogen is stored in
liver and muscle
- DISACCHARIDES: sucrose,
maltose, lactose
- MONOSACCHARIDES:
glucose, fructose,
galactose
- Fruits & honey (usually fructose,
sometimes glucose aka dextrose,
or sucrose)
- POLYSACCHARIDES (starches):
dextrin, glycogen, cellulose (these
are glucose chains).
- Starch is the storage
form of carbohydrates
in plants; best found in
seeds/grains
- GRAINS/starchy foods include wheat, rice
(parboiled), corn (GMO; combine with leafy
green veggies and/or dried beans), oats
(rolled), rye, buckwheat*, barley, millet,
potato, lentils and other legumes
- FIBER
- SOLUBLE: gums,
mucilages, pectin, some
hemicelluloses.
Gummy/viscous when
dissolved. Can help lower
LDL cholesterol.
- SOURCES: oat bran,
legumes, guar, barley,
apples, citrus fruits,
strawberries, carrots
- INSOLUBLE: Cellulose,
hemicellulose, lignin (cellular
framework of plants)
- Moves waste through the intestinal tract without
being digested, adds bulk & softness to stool, decreases
GI transit time
- SOURCES: whole wheat flour, bran,
vegetables, whole grains, fruits with
edible seeds (i.e., strawberries)
- Glycemic Index (GI): ranks
carbs. according to their
effect on blood sugar levels
Anmerkungen:
- Lower GI carbs are the better kind:
1. improve diabetes management; 2. Reduce heart
disease risk; 3. Improve blood cholesterol levels; 4. help
reach sustainable weight loss; 5. Help manage PCOS; 6.
Reduce hunger, feel full; 7. Prolong physical endurance
- Proteins
- made of amino
acids
Anmerkungen:
- errors in amino acid
sequencing can cause
birth defects
- essential (9): cannot be made by
the body. MUST be obtained
through the diet (mostLY animal
proteins)
Anmerkungen:
- leucine, histidine, isoleucine, tryptophan, lysine, methionine, pheylalanine, threonine, valine
- nonessential (11): can be synthesized by the
body from both plant and animal proteins
in foods
Anmerkungen:
- alanine, arginine, asparagine, aspartic acid, cysteine, glutamine, glutamic acid, glycine, proline, serine, tyrosine
- "reference protein" for
protein quality is EGG
Anmerkungen:
- Plant proteins are of lower quality, offering less protein per measurement BUT they improve the overall
QUALITY of protein and are therefore called "COMPLEMENTARY PROTEINS" Grains, legumes, nuts & seeds,
other veggies
- High quality protein
sources: eggs, fish, poultry,
cheese, milk
Anmerkungen:
- is easily digestible &
complete. COMPLETE contains all 9 essential
amino acids (not necessarily all
nonessential)
- PROTEIN
ROLES
- 1. BUILDING
BLOCKS
- 2. ENZYMES
- 3. HORMONES
- 4. FLUID & ELECTROLYTE
BALANCE
- 5. ACID-BASE
BALANCE
- 6.
TRANSPORTERS
- 7.
ANTIBODIES
- 8.
GLUCONEOGENEIS
- MICRONUTRIENTS
- Vitamins
Anmerkungen:
- "vita" = vital
"amine" = amino group
Vit. A & B1 were the first to be discovered while searching for the cure for beri-beri
- Water soluble
- Vitamin B Complex
Anmerkungen:
- Deficiency:
- beriberi (thiamin deficiency)
- pellagra (niacin deficiency)
~ deficiencies of individual B vitamins are extremely rare ~
NO TOXICITY
- ODI: 25-300 mg
RDI varies per individual vitamin
- B1, thiamine
Anmerkungen:
- needs increases if one has a high carb diet (needed for carb metabolism).
RDI: 1.5 mg
ODI: 25-300mg
**no toxicity
- FOOD SOURCES:
- organ meats (esp. liver)
- pork
- dried beans
- peas
- peanuts
- whole grains
- egg yolks
- poultry
- B2, riboflavin
- B3, niacin
- B6, pyridoxine
- B12, cobalamin
- Folic Acid
- B5, pantothenic acid
- Biotin
- Choline & inositol
- PABA
- Vitamin C (ascorbic acid)
Anmerkungen:
- Deficiency Symptoms
- SCURVY (listlessness, weakness, irritability, vague muscle & joint pains, weight loss; bleeding gums, gingivitis, loosening of teeth, extreme weakness & fatigue)
-
- Toxicity Symptoms
- nothing severe but sometimes intestinal gas 7 loose stools
- ODI: 500-5,000
RDI: 60
- Food Sources
- Green Veggies
- Berries
- Citrus Fruits
- Uses
- Growth & repair of tissues
- Antihistamine & antioxidant
- Cancer & atherosclerosis prevention
- Enhances immunity
- Reduces cholesterol & high BP
- Fat soluble
- Vitamin A (a.k.a.
retinol) and
beta-carotene &
other
carotenoids
Anmerkungen:
- Toxicity symptoms:
- bone/joint pain
- fatigue/insomnia
- loss of hair
- dry/fissuring lips
- loss of weight/appetite
- liver enlargment
- Deficiency symptoms:
- night blindness/eye problems
- skin disorders
- suboptimal health
- reproductive failure
- RDI:
* Vit.A: 5,000 IU (8,000 for pregnant/breastfeeding women) * Beta-Carotene: None ODI: * Beta-carotene: 11,000-25,000 IU * Vitamin A: 5,000-25,000 IU.
- Uses
- Prevents night blindness, macular
degeneration, and other eye problems
- Antioxidant
- Enhances immunity
- Heals GI ulcers
- Epithelial tissue
maintenance and repair
(good for acne & other
skin conditions)
- Cancer prevention
- Food Sources
- Fish liver oils (especially cod)
- Green & yellow fruits and
vegetables (including carrots)
- Vitamin
D
Anmerkungen:
- **is most commonly synthesized in the skin when sunlight hits oily, cholesterol-like substances in the skin. NOT ENZYMATICALLY CONTROLLED; is controlled by pigmentation (melanin)**
- Toxicity Symptoms ("sunstroke"):
- over-absorption of calcium from the bones; forms deposits that damage tissues of heart, blood vessels, lungs- nausea- vomiting- diarrhea- dizziness- weakness
- Deficiency Symptoms (rickets):
- stunted growth
- delayed tooth development
- weakness
- softened skull in infants
- irreversible bone deformities
Other deficiency symptoms:
- hypocalcemia (low calcium in blood)
- osteomalacia (reduced mineral content in bone)
- osteoperosis (reduced total bone mass)
- RDI: 400 IU
ODI: 1,000 IU
- Uses
- Necessary for calcium & phosphorus
absorption (BONE/MUSCLE HEALTH)
- Prevents/treats osteoporosis
- Enhances immunity
- Prevention of cancer, diabetes,
cardiovascular disease
- Lowers BP
- Food sources
- eggs
- fatty saltwater fish
- fish liver oils
- Vitamin
E
Anmerkungen:
- Deficiency Symptoms
- anemia (premature aging & death of red blood cells)
- neurological disturbances
- difficulty walking
- fragile capillaries
**in premature infants: retina disorders leading to blindness
- Toxicity Symptoms (over 1,200 IU per day):
- nausea
- flatulence
- diarrhea
- headache
- heart palpitations
- fainting
- RDI: 30 IU
ODI: 400-1,200 IU
- Uses
- Antioxidant
- Cancer & cardiovascular disease prevention
- Treats fibrocystic breasts & PMS
- Improves circulation
- Prevents age spots
- Tissue repair (wound healing)
- Food Sources
- Cold-pressed vegetable oils
- Whole grains, nuts
- Dark, leafy veggies, legumes
- Vitamin
K
Anmerkungen:
- Deficiencies occur only when there is malabsorption due to bowel obstruction, sprue, bowel shunts, regional ileitis, ulcerative colitis, chronic live disease.
- Toxicity occurs only from K3 (the synthetic version). Causes hemolytic anemia (red blood cells die faster than the body can replace them)
- RDI/ODI: 80 mcg
- Uses
- Blood clotting
- Helps with bone formation
- Prevents osteoporosis
- Food Sources
- Green vegetables
- Liver
- Egg yolks
- Whole wheat
- Minerals
- Boron
- Calcium
- Chromium
- Copper
- Iodine
- Iron
- Magnesium
- Manganese
- Phosphorus
- Potassium
- Selenium
- Zinc
- BEYOND VITAMINS & MINERALS
- water
- Coenzyme Q10
- DHEA
- Fish oil
- Flavonoids
- Garlic
- GLA
- Glutathione
- L-Carnitine
- Melatonin