Unit Three Nutritional Requirement
Unit Three Nutritional Requirement
Unit Three Nutritional Requirement
Nutritional requirement
By
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Learning objectives
At the end of the session, the students will be expected
to:-
– Define what nutritional requirement means
– Calculate an estimation of nutritional requirement
– Identify factors that affect estimating the nutritional
requirements
– Identify the Nutritional requirements for special age
groups
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Introduction
• What is nutritional requirement?
A nutritional requirement is defined as an
adequate continuing intake level of a nutrient
for a specified indicator of adequacy that will
maintain a defined level of nutrient for specified
age and groups.
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• Thus, Good nutrition must meet the needs of
varying ages, groups and activities and always
with an individual differences.
• Therefore, the planning of food to meet the
especial needs begins with:-
– Pregnant women
– Lactating mothers
– Infants and young children
– Adolescents
– Adults and
– Elderly age
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Method of Calculating Nutrient Intake
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1. Estimated Average Requirement (EAR)
• The intake value is estimated to meet the requirement
defined by a specified indicator of adequacy in 50% of a
specified groups (age and gender)
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3. Adequate intake (Safe intake)
• Is set instead of RDA, if sufficient evidence is not
available to calculate EAR. These values are based on
observed or experimentally determined estimates of
nutrient intake by a group (s) of healthy individuals.
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4. Tolerable Upper intake level
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Distribution of requirements to prevent deficiency and
toxicity
Adequate intake
RNI UL
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Principles of estimation of energy
requirement
• Energy requirement to be based on energy
expenditure, not energy intake
• Energy requirements estimates refers to
groups, not to individuals
• Energy requirement of a group is the mean of
the group and includes no safe margin
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Dietary Recommendations
• What should be considered?
• Group of healthy individuals representing the
population
• Adequacy of nutrient intake
• Life stages: infants; toddlers; early childhood;
puberty & adolescence; adulthood & older adults;
elderly; pregnancy & lactation
• Lifestyle: physical activity
• Diet
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Factors that affect the nutritional requirements
The energy requirements of an individual depend on:-
♦ Physical activities
♦ Body size and composition
♦ Occupation status
♦ Age may affect nutritional requirements in two ways:-
– the infant needs more energy because it is growing
– During old age, the energy need is less because aged people
are engaged with activities that requires less energy.
♦ Climate: Both very cold and very hot climate restrict
outdoor activities.
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Harris Benedict equation
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Nutritional Requirements during Critical
Periods
Special nutrient requirement during:-
• Pregnancy
• Lactation
• Infancy and early childhood
• adolescence
• Elderly age
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Nutrition during pregnancy
• A baby weighing less than 2.5 kg has an
increased chance of both physical and mental
health problems.
• It may also suffer more from infection and
malnutrition compared with babies born with
normal weight.
• Non-pregnant woman 2200 kcal, pregnant
women 2,500 kcal and lactating mother 2600
kcal or feed her four times in a day.
• Pregnant women should gain an average of
11.5-16 kg weight during her pregnancy time
During pregnancy period
Gaining weight in pregnancy
• A pregnant mother should gain weight smoothly
and steadily.
• If weight gain occurs suddenly, she should be
seen by a health professional.
• During the first three months, she should expect
to gain a total of 1–2 kg.
• During the last six months, she needs to gain
about 0.5 kg each week.
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Weight gain during pregnancy
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Nutrition During Pregnancy
• A pregnant woman needs extra foods,
especially those that are good sources of iron.
• Pregnant women need at least one additional
meal (200 Kcal) per day during the pregnancy.
• A pregnant woman should reduce her
involvement in strenuous household tasks that
lead to higher energy expenditure.
• Pregnant women should eat iodized salt in their
diet.
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Nutrition during lactation
• A lactating woman needs at least two extra meals
(550 Kcal) of whatever is available at home.
• In addition a dose of vitamin A (200,000IU) should be
given once between delivery and six weeks after
delivery.
– This will enable the baby to get an adequate supply
of vitamin A for the first six months.
– But it is not routinely recommended by WHO!
• During the first six months the best way of feeding
the baby is breastfeed exclusively.
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Proper Positioning and Attachment
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Protein
Still the highest period in human life in terms of
protein requirement
1.98g/kg of BW is required for proper growth
to occur
RDA for infants is 2.2g/kg for the first 6 months
and then reduced to 2g/kg in the second 6
months
(Tyrosine, Taurine, and Cysteine) amino Acids
are required
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CHOs
Major energy contributor during infancy
Lactose should be the primary CHO at least in
the first half of infancy
5g/kg of CHO is required to prevent ketosis
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Fat and fatty acids
More than half of the energy in BM is derived
from fat
Essential fatty acids are required in larger
amount during infancy (>30% of total energy)
Mainly for neurological development
Milk is a better source of both Omega-3 and 6
PUFAs
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Vitamins and Minerals
Consumption of 700-800 ml of BM provides twice
RDA of Vitamin A but same intake will not allow the
acquisition of RDA of Vitamin D
BM is not also a good source of Vitamin K , it is
recommended to be given routinely at birth
If the mother was taking enough Fe during pregnancy
, the iron store in the infant is enough for the first 6
months of life
Fe supplementation is needed after 6 months of life
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Nutrition for adolescents
• Adolescents also undergo a very rapid growth
during their puberty (called the pubertal growth
spurt).
• During the pubertal growth spurt, they increase
rapidly both in weight and height.
• Therefore, they need a nutrient intake that is
proportional with their rate of growth.
• The growth rate is very high right after birth
(infancy).
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Continued….
• Energy needs are influenced by:
-activity level
-basal metabolic rate (BMR)
-pubertal growth & development
-gender
• Because males have greater increases in ht, wt, &
lean body mass (LBM) & higher BMR, they have a
higher caloric need than females
Protein Requirements in Adolescents
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Specific nutrient requirements in old age
• An elderly person requires less energy than a
younger individual due to reductions in muscle
mass and physical activity
• They need fewer calories than younger people,
but about the same amount of protein and other
nutrients.
– But need micronutrients like zinc, iron, vitamins,
iodine
– Increased Vitamin D requirement
– Vitamin A, B9,B12….
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Nutritional needs of elderly
• Energy
Requirement decreases with age
Body composition changes
BMR decreases
Physical activity decreases
• Protein
1-1.5 gm/ kg body weight
Help blunt loss of lean body mass
Lower efficiency of dietary protein utilization
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• Carbohydrate
Abundant carbohydrates
Increase intake complex carbohydrates
65 % or more total calories from carbohydrates
• Fat
25 to 35 % of total calories
Vitamins
• Vitamin A
Slower uptake by peripheral tissues - higher circulating
levels
Increased absorption because of changes in lining of small
intestine
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• Vitamin D
10 -20 microgram
Limited exposure to direct sunlight
Reduced dermal synthesis
Reduced conversation to active hormone
• Vitamin B-6
Increase requirement
Falling blood concentration due to age
Utilization diminished
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• Vitamin B-12
3 microgram
Reduced absorption caused by fall in gastric acid
Vitamin B 12 injection recommended if intrinsic
synthesis is inadequate
• Folate
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Minerals
• Calcium
700 mg for adults over 50 years
Slows bone loss
• Iron
Increase intake is recommended
Reduced absorption in elderly
• Sodium
Needs to be restricted
2-4 mg/day
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Thank you !
for
your Attention