1 / 46

Chapter 2 Nutritional Needs

Chapter 2 Nutritional Needs. Nutrition Food Science. Foods Provide the nutrients needed for good health. NUTRIENT. Chemical substance in food that helps maintain the body. NUTRITION. The study of how the body uses nutrients in the foods you eat. Malnutrition.

val
Download Presentation

Chapter 2 Nutritional Needs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 2 Nutritional Needs Nutrition Food Science

  2. Foods Provide the nutrients needed for good health

  3. NUTRIENT • Chemical substance in food that helps maintain the body

  4. NUTRITION • The study of how the body uses nutrients in the foods you eat

  5. Malnutrition • A lack of the right proportions of nutrients over an extended period.

  6. NUTRIENTS • Over 50 needed for good health • All help build & maintain cells & tissue • Regulate bodily processes - breathing • No single food provides all nutrients

  7. The Six Main Nutrients • Carbohydrates • Fats • Proteins • Vitamins • Minerals • Water

  8. Sources of Calories • Carbohydrates & Proteins = 4 calories / gm • Fat = 9calories / gm • 30% from fat • 60% from carbohydrates • 10% from proteins

  9. Carbohydrates • Body’s main source of energy!!!

  10. 2 main types of Carbs • SIMPLE Carbohydrates • Glucose • Fructose Note: any word that • Galactose ends in “ose” is a • Sucrose type of sugar • Lactose • maltose

  11. Complex Carbohydrates • Made from many glucose sugar units that are bonded together. • Starch is the most abundant carbohydrate in the diet • It is the storage form of energy in plants

  12. Functions Of Carbs • Provide energy • Help body digest fats • Allow body to use proteins for growth & maintenance instead of energy

  13. Fiber… • Helps prevent heart disease • Lower cholesterol • Helps speed food through the body • Help dilute carcinogens in food • Need 25 (f) – 38 (m) grams daily

  14. Too Much / Too Little Carbohydrate • Deficient… • Body uses protein as energy • Constipation • Excess • Weight gain • Tooth & gum decay from acid produced by bacteria

  15. Function of Fats • Promote healthy skin and normal cell growth • Carry vitamins ADE&K to wherever needed • Provide a reserve supply of energy • Act as a cushion to protect your heart, liver, and other vital organs

  16. Fats add flavor • They digest slowly - so they help you feel full longer • Too much fat can increase the risk of heart disease and cancer

  17. Saturated Fats • Come from Animals • Are solid at room temperature

  18. Fat Fat and More Fat! • Many fats are hidden in our foods • Foods high in fat • Butter • Margarine • Oils • Cream • Sour Cream • Salad Dressing • Fried Foods • Baked Goods • Chocolate

  19. Unsaturated Fats • Come from plants • Liquid at room Temperature • Olive oil • Corn oil • Vegetable oil

  20. “Good Fats”

  21. Cholesterol • Is a fat-like substance present in all cells that is needed for many body processes • Adults manufacture all the cholesterol they need in the liver • LDL-takes cholesterol from liver to wherever it’s needed in the body BUT if too much is circulating the excess amounts of cholesterol can build up in artery walls! “BAD cholesterol” • HDL-picks up excess cholesterol and takes it back to the liver keeping it from causing harm. “GOOD cholesterol”

  22. Proteins • made of small units called amino acids • 22 known amino acids • 9 essential – body does not make them • 11 non-essential – body can make them

  23. Complete Proteins: Supply all 9 essential amino acids – animal foods • Incomplete proteins: lack one or more essential amino acids- plant foods

  24. Proteins • Provide energy • Help body grow and repair worn out and damaged parts • Hair, eyes, skin, muscles, and bones are made of proteins • Help regulate body functions • High protein foods: meat, poultry, fish, eggs, and dairy products, dry beans, peas, peanuts, veggies and grains

  25. Too Much / Too LittleProtein • Excess amounts are broken down and stored in the body as fat!! • Deficiency: Called PEM (Protein –energy Malnutrition) Includes fatigue, weight loss, diarrhea, infections & stunted growth

  26. Types of Vitamins • Water-soluble - dissolve in water vitamin C and B vitamins • Fat-soluble - absorbed and transported by fat (vitamins A,D,E, and K)

  27. Vitamins • Organic substances needed in small amounts for: *Normal growth *Maintenance *Reproduction • Help keep your body’s tissues healthy and systems working properly

  28. Antioxidents • Substances that protect body cells and the immune system from harmful chemicals in the air, certain foods, and tobacco smoke.

  29. Minerals • Inorganic substances that make up 4% of your body • Most minerals become a part of your body such as teeth and bones

  30. Macrominerals: • Calcium • Sodium • Phosphorous • Potassium • Magnesium • Chlorine

  31. Microminerals • Needed in small amounts (trace elements) • Iron • Zinc • Iodine • Flourine

  32. Electrolytes: minerals that work together to maintain the body’s fluid balance (potassium, sodium, and chloride) • Trace Minerals: minerals needed in very small amounts (iron, zinc, copper, iodine, and selenium)

  33. Where do I get Minerals?? • Eat plenty of calcium rich foods • Meat, poultry, fish • Nuts • Whole Grains • Green Veggies • Dry beans, peas, lentils

  34. WATER • The most critical nutrient to survival!!! • People can live without food for 40 days but only 3 without water!!! • Water exists in ALL body cells!! • After helping break foods down into nutrients water carries the nutrients to the cells that need them

  35. What does water do for your body?? • breaks the nutrients down into usable forms –helps your joints stay lubricated, your skin soft, and your mind alert • filters out impurities and gets rid of waste products • Keeps body temperature normal!!

  36. How much is enough??? • The body uses 2-3 quarts of water a day!!! If lost fluid isn’t replaced a person can become dehydrated • You need 8 cups (2L) of water a day • Most fruits and veggies contain water!

  37. End of Part I

  38. How your body uses food • DIGESTION!!! • The process of breaking down food into usable nutrients. It takes place in the digestive system…..But how???

  39. Let’s start with your food!!! • Movement of Food Through the System • • Mouth: Seconds • Esophagus: Seconds• Stomach: Up to 3 ½ hours• Small Intestine: Minutes• Large Intestine: Hours • We will start with your food, so get ready!!!

  40. Digestion begins in the ….. • Mouth!!Just smelling and seeing food, or even thinking about it can start saliva flowing in your mouth! • Saliva is the first to break down the foods chemically • Food is also broken down physically as your teeth grind it into tiny pieces • Chewing food is very important!!

  41. Next it moves to your….. • Esophagus!!! • a long tube connecting your mouth to the stomach • Peristalsis forces food into the stomach • The stomach holds up to 4 cups of food! Juices in the stomach churn food into a substance called “chyme”.

  42. From the stomach…… • Chyme is released into the small intestine a little at a time. The small intestine is a long, winding tube between the stomach and the large intestine.

  43. When fully broken down carbohydrates are turned into a simple sugar called • GLUCOSE- • which is the body’s basic fuel supply!

  44. Fats are changed into fatty acids • Proteins are broken down into amino acids • Vitamins and Minerals do not need to be broken down- they are ready just as they are!

  45. Using the Nutrients…. • Once food has been broken down, digestion is complete! • BUT- your body must absorb the nutrients and take them to where they can be used or stored • Nutrients are absorbed into the blood stream. Most absorption takes place in the small intestine. • After absorption, some material is left. (mainly fiber) This material is moved into the large intestine also called the colon. The colon removes water, potassium, and sodium. • The Remainder is stored in the rectum until elimination!

More Related