Nutrition involves the interaction of nutrients from food in relation to health. It includes intake, absorption, and excretion of nutrients. A poor diet can negatively impact health by causing deficiency diseases or chronic conditions. Nutrients are categorized as macronutrients and micronutrients. Macronutrients include carbohydrates, fats, proteins, and water, and provide energy and structure. Micronutrients are required in small amounts and include minerals and vitamins. Antioxidants help neutralize harmful free radicals produced during cellular metabolism.
Nutrition involves the interaction of nutrients from food in relation to health. It includes intake, absorption, and excretion of nutrients. A poor diet can negatively impact health by causing deficiency diseases or chronic conditions. Nutrients are categorized as macronutrients and micronutrients. Macronutrients include carbohydrates, fats, proteins, and water, and provide energy and structure. Micronutrients are required in small amounts and include minerals and vitamins. Antioxidants help neutralize harmful free radicals produced during cellular metabolism.
Nutrition involves the interaction of nutrients from food in relation to health. It includes intake, absorption, and excretion of nutrients. A poor diet can negatively impact health by causing deficiency diseases or chronic conditions. Nutrients are categorized as macronutrients and micronutrients. Macronutrients include carbohydrates, fats, proteins, and water, and provide energy and structure. Micronutrients are required in small amounts and include minerals and vitamins. Antioxidants help neutralize harmful free radicals produced during cellular metabolism.
Nutrition involves the interaction of nutrients from food in relation to health. It includes intake, absorption, and excretion of nutrients. A poor diet can negatively impact health by causing deficiency diseases or chronic conditions. Nutrients are categorized as macronutrients and micronutrients. Macronutrients include carbohydrates, fats, proteins, and water, and provide energy and structure. Micronutrients are required in small amounts and include minerals and vitamins. Antioxidants help neutralize harmful free radicals produced during cellular metabolism.
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NUTRITION
Nutrition is the science that interprets the
interaction of nutrients and other substances in food (e.g. phytonutrients, anthocyanins, tannins, etc.) in relation to maintenance, growth, reproduction, health and disease of an organism. It includes food intake, absorption, assimilation, biosynthesis, catabolism and excretion. A poor diet may have an injurious impact on health, causing deficiency diseases such as scurvy and kwashiorkor; health-threatening conditions like obesity and metabolic syndrome and such common chronic systemic diseases as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and osteoporosis. Nutrients are thought to be of two types: MACRO-NUTRIENTS which are needed in relatively large amounts, and MICRONUTRIENTS which are needed in smaller quantities. MACRO-NUTRIENTS The macronutrients are CARBOHYDRATES, FATS, PROTEINS, and WATER. Provide structural material and energy. CARBOHYDRATES CnH2nOn Most abundant class of bioorganic molecules on planet Earth. Classified on the basis of molecular size of monosaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides that are related to each other through hydrolysis. Provides energy FIBER A carbohydrate that is incompletely absorbed in humans and in some animals. It has limited absorption and digestibility. Consists mainly of cellulose, a large carbohydrate polymer that is indigestible as humans do not have the required enzymes to disassemble it. Dietary fiber helps reduce the chance of gastrointestinal problems such as constipation and diarrhea by increasing the weight and size of stool and softening it. Insoluble fiber, found in whole wheat flour, nuts and vegetables, especially stimulates peristalsis – the rhythmic muscular contractions of the intestines, which moves along the digestive tract. There are two subcategories: SOLUBLE FIBER and INSOLUBLE FIBER SOLUBLE FIBER Soluble fiber, found in oats, peas, beans, and many fruits, dissolves in water in the intestinal tract to produce a gel that slows the movement of food through the intestines. Helps lower blood glucose levels because it can slow the absorption of sugar. INSOLUBLE FIBER Insoluble fiber, found in whole wheat flour, nuts and vegetables, especially stimulates peristalsis – the rhythmic muscular contractions of the intestines, which moves along the digestive tract. Helps lessen insulin spikes, and therefore reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes. Fats Is a triacylglycerol mixture that is a solid or semi-solid at room temperature (25o C) Fats are classified as SATURATED and UNSATURATED FAT. SATURATED FAT Is a fatty acid with a carbon chain in which all carbon-carbon bonds are single bonds. UNSATURATED FATS Classified as monounsaturated (one double- bond) or polyunsaturated (many double- bonds). Furthermore, depending on the location of the double-bond in the fatty acid chain, unsaturated fatty acids are classified as omega-3 or omega-6 fatty acids. PROTEIN Naturally occuring unbranched polymer in which the monomer units are amino acids. Also forms the enzymes that control chemical reactions throughout the body. Excess amino acids from protein can be converted into glucose and used for fuel through a process called gluconeogenesis. WATER Early recommendations for the quantity of water required for maintenance of good health suggested that 6–8 glasses of water daily is the minimum to maintain proper hydration. For those who have healthy kidneys, it is somewhat difficult to drink too much water, but (especially in warm humid weather and while exercising) it is dangerous to drink too little. While over hydration is much less common than dehydration, it is also possible to drink far more water than necessary, which can result in water intoxication, a serious and potentially fatal condition MICRONUTRIENTS Are nutrients required by humans and other organisms throughout life in small quantities to orchestrate a range of physiological functions. MINERALS Dietary minerals are inorganic chemical elements required by living organisms, other than the four elements carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen that are present in nearly all organic molecules minerals are often artificially added to the diet as supplements; the most famous is likely iodine in iodized salt which prevents goiter. MACROMINERALS Many elements are essential in relative quantity; they are usually called "bulk minerals". Some are structural, but many play a role as electrolytes. Elements with recommended dietary allowance (RDA) greater than 150 mg/day are, in alphabetical order. CALCIUM, a common electrolyte, but also needed structurally (for muscle and digestive system health, bone strength, some forms neutralize acidity, may help clear toxins, provides signaling ions for nerve and membrane functions) MAGNESIUM, required for processing ATP and related reactions (builds bone, causes strong peristalsis, increases flexibility, increases alkalinity) PHOSPHORUS, required component of bones; essential for energy processing POTASSIUM, a very common electrolyte (heart and nerve health) SODIUM, a very common electrolyte; in general not found in dietary supplements, despite being needed in large quantities, because the ion is very common in food: typically as sodium chloride, or common salt. Excessive sodium consumption can deplete calcium and magnesium, leading to high blood pressure and osteoporosis. Many elements are required in trace amounts, usually because they play a catalytic role in en zymes. COBALT required for biosynthesis of vitamin B12 family of coenzymes. Animals cannot biosynthesize B12, and must obtain this cobalt-containing vitamin in the diet COPPER required component of many redox enzymes, including cytochrome c oxidase. CHROMIUM required for sugar metabolism. IRON required for many enzymes, and for hemoglobin and some other proteins ZINC required for several enzymes such as carboxypeptidase, liver alcohol dehydrogenase, and carbonic anhydrase. VITAMINS Is an organic compound, essential in small amounts for the proper functioning of the human body that must be obtained from dietary sources because the body cannot synthesize it. Solubility characteristics divide the vitamins into two major classes: the WATER-SOLUBLE and FAT-SOLUBLE VITAMINS. ANTIOXIDANTS As cellular metabolism/energy production requires oxygen, potentially damaging (e.g., mutation causing) compounds known as free radicals can form. Most of these are oxidizers (i.e., acceptors of electrons) and some react very strongly. For the continued normal cellular maintenance, growth, and division, these free radicals must be sufficiently neutralized by antioxid Different antioxidants are now known to function in a cooperative network. For example, Vitamin C can reactivate free radical-containing glutathione or Vitamin E by accepting the free radical itself. Some antioxidants are more effective than others at neutralizing different free radicals. Some cannot neutralize certain free radicals. Some cannot be present in certain areas of free radical development