310 likes | 322 Views
This overview explains the different types of lipids and fats, including triglycerides, phospholipids, and sterols. Learn about saturated and unsaturated fats, essential fatty acids, and the role of fats in the body. Discover how fats and cholesterol travel through the body and their impact on heart health.
E N D
Lipid & Fat: Overview • What is a lipid? • Triglycerides, Phospholipids and Sterols • Triglycerides = Fat • Saturated & unsaturated • Essential fatty acids • Omega 3 & Omega 6 • Trans fat • Why do you need fat? • How does fat & cholesterol travel through your body? • LDL & HDL • How to eat to prevent heart disease • Good fat & bad fat
Lipids • Triglycerides • Fats and oils • Phospholipids • The body can make what it needs • Lecithin • Sterols • The body can make what it needs • Cholesterol
Triglycerides • Major lipid in the diet and your body • Fat in food = Triglycerides • Fat in your blood & fat cells = Triglycerides • Fat = Triglycerides • Made of glycerol and 3 fatty acids
Fatty Acids • 2 Types of Fatty Acids • Saturated fatty acids • Unsaturated fatty acids • Monounsaturated • Polyunsaturated • The Type of Fatty Acid Determines: • Whether the fat is solid or liquid at room temperature • Whether the fat is healthy or unhealthy for you
Saturated Fatty Acid • All single bonds between carbons • Saturated “full” with hydrogen atoms • Solid at room temperature
Saturated Fat • Sources: Animal: Beef, salami, bacon, eggs (yolk), dairy products (milk, butter, ice cream) Tropical Oils: coconut oil, palm oil & products made with these oils • Health effects: • Increases LDL “bad” cholesterol in the blood
Unsaturated Fatty Acids • Not saturated with hydrogen • Liquid at room temperature • 2 types • Monounsaturated • Polyunsaturated
Monounsaturated Fatty Acid • 1 double bond • One double bond: Not saturated “not full” with hydrogen • Liquid at room temperature
Monounsaturated Fat • Sources: Plant Foods: Olive oil, canola oil, peanuts, almonds, pecans, avocado, olives • Health effects: • Decreases LDL “bad” cholesterol • Increases HDL “good” cholesterol
Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid • 2 or more double bonds • Liquid at room temperature
Polyunsaturated Fat • Sources: Plant Foods: Vegetable oil (soybean, corn, sunflower, etc), walnuts, sunflower seeds, mayonnaise • Health effects: • Decreases LDL “bad” cholesterol • Decreases HDL “good” cholesterol (not good!)
Essential Fatty Acids • Polyunsaturated fats that can not be made in the body • Omega 3 (linolenic) double bond 3rd carbon • Omega 6 (linoleic) double bond 6th carbon
Omega 3 Fatty Acids • Benefits: • Long chain omega 3 (EPA & DHA) in fish is most beneficial! • Reduce risk of heart disease and stroke • May prevent blood clots & promote flexible blood vessels • Decrease inflammatory response • May help prevent depression • Sources: • Fish: Salmon, Sardines, Tuna, Trout, Swordfish, Halibut, Cod, Mackerel, Shrimp, Oysters, Scallops, Crab • Walnuts & Flaxseed (short chain omega 3) • Fortified eggs & milk • Fish supplements (500-600 mg/day) • Soybean & canola oil provide trace amounts of short chain omega 3 – no positive health effects
Triglycerides • Fat in food contains several different types of fatty acids. • Most fat contains 1 predominate type of fatty acid. • Fat is classified according to the predominate fatty acid.
Trans Fat • Hydrogenation: • Transfat created by adding hydrogens to a polyunsaturated fat. • Creates “partially hydrogenated” & “hydrogenated” oil • Makes an unsaturated oil more solid at room temperature, thus a more shelf stable product • Yields TRANS FAT • Negative Health Effects: • Increases LDL “bad” cholesterol • Decreases HDL “good” cholesterol • Most harmful of all the fats • Must be included on food labels
Cis vs Trans Fatty Acids • Cis fatty acids • Chain is bent • Occur naturally • Trans fatty acids • Chain is straighter • Produced by hydrogenation
CQ FAT: Revised (back of card) • Omega 3, 6 & 9 are all important to consume. • True • False • Which is the healthiest oil? • Coconut oil • Olive oil • Canola oil • A food referred to as “monounsaturated” (such as nuts) does not have any saturated fat. • True • False
Why do you need fat? • Energy Source • Provides 9 calories per gram • Supplies 60% of body’s resting energy needs • Form of stored energy in adipose tissue • Insulation & Protection • Carries fat-soluble vitamins • Flavor & Satiety
How does fat become a part of you? • Stomach breaks down about 30% of fat • MOST DIGESTION occurs in SMALL INTESTINE • Bile and pancreatic lipase break fat into monoglycerides and free fatty acids • After absorption inside intestinal wall, the triglyceride is remade • Fat, cholesterol and phospholipds (all lipids) join with protein to form a lipoprotein carrier – chylomicron. • Fat travels via lipoproteins in the bloodstream
“Packages” that transport lipids in the blood to cells and liver Lipoproteins
Phospholipids • Glycerol with 2 fatty acids and a phosphate nitrogen component • Compatible in fat and blood (water) • Major component of cell membranes allowing fatty & water soluble substances into cell • Coat the surface of lipoproteins
Cholesterol • Used to make bile (needed for digestion of fat) • Abundant in cell membranes, nerve & brain tissue • NOT ESSENTIAL - The body makes it • Made in liver. Only found in animal products. • Food with high saturated fat & trans fat increases blood cholesterol MORE THAN food that has cholesterol (shrimp, egg yolks…)
Lipoproteins in the Body • LDL: Low-density lipoproteins (bad) • Deliver cholesterol to cells • High LDL -risk factor for heart disease • HDL: High-density lipoproteins (good) • Removes cholesterol – protective • High HDL–reduces risk for heart disease • Lipoprotiens – NOT in foods, ONLY in blood!
The “Good” vs “Bad” Fat • The Good: Unsaturated Fat • Monounsaturated Fat • Lower harmful LDL cholesterol • Raise the helpful HDL cholesterol • Foods: Peanuts, olives, avocado, almonds, pecans, olive oil, canola oil and peanut oil • Polyunsaturated Fat • Lower harmful LDL cholesterol • Decrease the helpful HDL cholesterol (not good) • Foods: Soybean & corn oil (and foods made with these oils), mayonnaise, sunflower seeds, walnuts
The “Good” vs “Bad” Fat • The Bad: Trans & Saturated Fat • Trans Fat • Increases harmful LDL cholesterol • Decreases helpful HDL cholesterol • Foods with partially hydrogenated oil: margarine, crackers, cookies, peanut butter, fast food, popcorn…check label! • Saturated Fat • Raises harmful LDL cholesterol • Foods: All dairy (except fat free), butter, cheese, ice cream, beef, bacon palm & palm kernel & coconut oil (in cookies, crackers, cakes and donuts)
How to Eat to Heart Disease • Fat • Less than 10% calories from saturated fat • Choose products with 0 trans fat. • Choose monounsaturated fats (olive oil, avocado, nuts) • Minimize omega 6 polyunsaturated oils (soy & corn oil, mayo and processed foods with these ingredients) • Choose fiber-rich foods • Aim for 25-35 grams per day
How to Eat to Heart Disease • Include Omega-3 foods • Fatty fish 1-2 times/week (most helpful!) • Walnuts, flaxseed, fortified eggs & milk • Sustainable seafood A-Z: www.seafoodwatch.org • Mercury calculator for Tuna- www.ewg.org • Consider Fish oil supplements • 500 – 600 mg/day recommended (EPA & DHA combined) • Limit cholesterol • <300 mg per day
CQ FAT: Write “revised” ideas on back of notecard • Can a food be “cholesterol free” & raise your “bad” cholesterol? Why or why not? • Heart disease is #1 cause of death in this country…what role does fat play?