Term
USDA exercise recommendations for reducing risk of chronic disease in adulthood |
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Definition
at least 30 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity, above usual activity, at work or home on most days of the week |
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Term
USDA exercise recommendations for mantaining body weight |
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Definition
approx. 60 minutes of moderate- to vigorous-intensity activity on most days of the week while not exceeding caloric intake |
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Term
USDA recommendations (for 2,000 cal diet): fruits |
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Definition
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Term
USDA recommendations (for 2,000 cal diet): vegetables |
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Definition
2.5 cups daily, choosing from all five subgroups several times a week (dark green, orange, legumes, starchy vegetables, other vegetables) |
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Term
USDA recommendations (for 2,000 cal diet): milk products |
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Definition
3 cups per day of fat-free or low-fat products |
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Term
USDA recommendations: fat |
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Definition
total fat intake of 20-35% of calories, most from poly- and monounsaturated fatty acids less than 10% of cal from saturated fatty acids less than 300mg/day of cholesterol avoid trans fatty acids and saturated fats 6 tsp of oils daily
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Term
USDA recommendations (for 2,000 cal diet): carbs |
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Definition
- 45-65% daily food intake
- as fiber-rich as possible
- little added sugars or caloric sweeeteners
- 6 oz. daily (half from whole grains)
- 75% should be complex carbohydrates, 25% simple (lactose, fruit sources, sugar)
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Term
USDA recommendations: sodium |
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Definition
less than 2300 mg (1 teaspoon of salt) of sodium per day |
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Term
RD (registered dietician) requirements |
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Definition
4 years training, 1 year internship, licensing exam |
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Term
Diet-related diseases (9) |
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Definition
- coronary vascular disease
- stomach cancers
- stroke
- diabetes
- gall bladder disease
- cervical & prostate cancers
- renal disease (kidneys)
- atherosclerosis (hardening of arteries)
- hypertension
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Term
we are _th fattest nation in the world by BMI (_% overweight) |
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Definition
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Term
over _ genes have been identified as possibly contributing to obesity |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Daily Reference Intakes -- measure of intakes for healthy people in US (comprised of RDAs, AIs, ULs and EARs)
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Term
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Definition
Recommended Dietary Allowances: average daily nutrient intake that meets needs of 97-98% of healthy people in given life stage/gender. |
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Term
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Definition
Estimated Average Requirements: basis by which RDAs are set. average daily nutrient intake estimated to meet requirement of half the healthy individuals in given life stage/gender. Used in policy making. |
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Term
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Definition
Daily Values -- on food labels. Lists contain fiber, proteins, vitamins, minerals (in recommended dietary allowances form) and cholesterol, fat, calories and sodium (in upper limits/daily maximums form) |
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Term
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Definition
Adequate Intakes - RDAs used whenever scientific data are insufficient to allow establishment of RDA value. based on observed intakes of healthy people. |
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Term
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Definition
Tolerable Upper Intake Levels: highest average daily nutrient intake level that is likely to pose no risk of toxicity |
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Term
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Definition
National Health ad Nutrition Educational Survey -- how Americans actually eat |
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Term
USDA recommended intake: protein |
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Definition
10-35% of daily food intake 5.5 oz. meat/legumes per day based on 2,000 cal diet .8grams protein per kg of body weight |
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Term
USDA recommendations: sugar |
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Definition
less than 25% daily caloric intake (20-30g of which should be fiber) |
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Term
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Definition
caloric contribution of a food relative to the total nutrients it provides (i.e. low nutrient density = a food that has more calories than nutrients, like soda) |
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Term
These vitamins and minerals are on DV labels because Americans are most often deficient in them |
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Definition
Vitamin A, Calcium, Vitamin C, Iron |
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Term
In nutrition label, fat, cholesterol and sodium should be between x and y % of DV |
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Definition
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Term
vitamin C is best absorbed in _ media calcium is best absorbed in _ media [why naturally occuring environment is optimal scenario for nutrient absorption] |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
red in blood cells that carries oxygen and needs iron |
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Term
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Definition
most of the body is bone, and when there's not enough calcium to build bone (we are building bones from fetuses to 21-25 y.o.) the body leaches it from blood |
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Term
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Definition
- Half should be whole grains
- Contribute folate, niacin, riboflavin, thiamin, iron, magnesium, selenium, fibre
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Term
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Definition
- Contribute folate, vtamins A, C, E, magnesium, potassium, fiber
- choose variety from 5 subgroups:
- dark green
- orange/deep yellow
- legumes
- starchy vegetables (corn, peas, potatoes)
- other (celery, cucumbers, eggplant, mushrooms, onions, peppers, tomatoes, zucchini)
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Term
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Definition
- should be fat-free or low-fat
- contribute protein, riboflavin, vitamin B12, calcium, magnesium, potassium and (when fortified) vitamins A and D
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Term
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Definition
- no more than 1/3 of rec. intake as juice
- contribute folate, vitamins A and C, potassium fiber
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Term
Meat/Poultry/Fish/Legumes/Eggs/Nuts |
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Definition
- make lean or low-fat choices, prepare with little or no fat
- meat, poultry, fish and eggs contribute protein, niacin, thiamin, vitamins B6 and B12, iron, magnesium, potassium and zinc
- legumes and nuts contribute protein, folate, thiamin, vitamin E, irono, magnesium, potassium, zinc, fiber
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Term
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Definition
- contribute vitamin E and essential fatty acids
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Term
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Definition
- mechanical and chemical digestion begins
- chewing increases surface area for chemical action
- saliva contains ptylin (salivary amylase) which hydrolyzes starch into dextrine (why bread--and toast-taste sweeter)
- saliva lubricates food, cleanses teeth, keeps harmful bacteria in check
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Term
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Definition
- can hold up to 2.5 liters (in adult male)
- contracts when empty
- food mixes with gastric digestive juices (pepsin, HCl) to form chyme
- chyme slowly released through valve into small intestine
- half the contents of full stomach of solid food will empty 2 hrs after meal, but can take up to 8 hrs to complete process
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Term
process by which food is moved along GI tract |
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Definition
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Term
Digestion: small intenstine |
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Definition
- divided into duodenum, jejunum, ileum
- all but fibers are broken down and absorbed
- villi form brush border that increases surface area for absorption into blood stream
- into general circulatory system or
- into lymphatic system (heart, liver)
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Term
4 mechanisms of absorption |
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Definition
- simple diffusion (osmosis)
- passie diffusio (most water soluble substances have to attach themselves to carriers to pass through cell membrane from higher to lower concentration)
- active transport (low to high, requires ATP)
- pinocytosis (cellsurrounds nutrient and sucks it up)
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Term
______ pass into the blood stream to the liver |
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Definition
water-soluble nutrients (simple sugars, amino acids, water-soluble vitamins and minerals) |
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Term
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Definition
converts galactose and fructose to glucose releases nutrients for cellular use or stores them |
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Term
Digestion: fat-soluble nutrients |
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Definition
attach to protein carriers called chylomicrons, enter lymphatic system then circulatory system as lipoproteins split into fatty acids and glycerol |
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Term
catabolism/anabolism/metabolism |
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Definition
catabolism=breaking down processes, sometimes with release of energy anabolism=building up processes (synthesis of new cells) metabolism=all functions of digestion and absorption |
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Term
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Definition
- 2% of CHO, 5% of lipids and 8% of proteins are unneeded and therefore excreted
- metabolic wastes (carbon dioxide, water, nitrogenous products of protein metabolism) excreted
- through sweat (water, Na, K, Cl)
- through kidneys (nitrogen, water-soluble nutrients, water)
- lungs (CO2, water)
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Term
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Definition
addition of thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, folic acid and iron to bread/flour/rice/coourn |
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Term
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Definition
simple sugars glucose, fructose, galactose only sugar used for energy normal fasting glucose=60-85mg/dl >160mg/dl = hyperglycemia <80 mg/dl hypoglycemia |
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Term
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Definition
- double sugars
- sucrose (table sugar), maltose (made from starch), lactose
- must be converted into monosaccharides by sucrase, maltase and lactase
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Term
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Definition
- starch
- glycogen (partial breakdown of starch by heat/digestion)
- dextrin (bran of grains, skins and fibers of fruits and vegetbales)
- fibers
- first converted to disaccharides, then monosaccharides (most fibers remain undigested)
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Term
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Definition
use protein for tissue synthesis, excessive oxidation of fats for energy leading to ketosis |
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Term
results of carbohydrate metabolism |
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Definition
glucose in blood (can be catabolized for energy or anabolized as glycogen) excesses stored as fat |
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Term
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Definition
blood glucose is too high for kidneys to absorb so it appears in urine |
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Term
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Definition
- sweeter, cheaper, lasts longer
- processed not in stomach but in liver, increasing liver's release of triglycerides (fat stored in body)
- implicated in rising obesity/diabetes/heart disease rates
- made from coorn starch
- no enxyme in body to break this down, turns into fat
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Term
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Definition
impaired glucose tolerance inability of body to regulate blood glucose in response to carbs leading cause of blindness, end-stage renal disease, lower leg amputations |
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Term
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Definition
- laxative properties
- water holding
- increased fecal bulk
- speeds transit time
- alters microflora (good bacteria)
- dilution/binding
- lowers cholesterol,decreases lipid absorption, increases bile excretion [heart disease]
- slows glucose absoprtion, decreases plasma insulin response [diabetes]
- increases satiety,includes less calorie-dense foods [obesity]
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Term
Functions of Carbohydrates |
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Definition
- quick source of energy
- main source of energy for brain and eye
- essential for coomplete oxidation of fats
- maintains blood sugar
- regulates GI function
- spares protein from being used for energy
- carries essential nutrients
- glycogen in liver and muscle used as small and quick store for excess glucose [carboloading]
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Term
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Definition
- mouth
- stomach
- pancrease converts into glucose/fructose/maltase (simple sugars)
- liver converts fructose/galactose into glucose, sends or stores all glucose
- 3+4 simultaneous with intenstines?
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Term
Metabolism and Absorption |
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Definition
absorption rate depends on speed of CHO release into small intenstine, mixture of food present in intestine glucose excesses converted to fat and stored as adipose (fat) tissue |
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Term
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Definition
capable of causing (dental) caries |
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Term
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Definition
elevated trigylcerides in blood risk for heart disease sugar effects bloodo lipids the most |
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Term
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Definition
pockets in intestines/GI track from unuse (lack of fiber) in which food is trapped and can reabsorb into blood tissue, or diverticuli (pockets) wioll explode and contaminate blood |
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Term
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Definition
correlates to diabetes because it gives excessive caloric intake and low nutrient density, = obesity = diabetes |
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Term
prebiotics and probiotics |
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Definition
probiotics are actual bacteria, prebiotics are what feed bacteria |
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Term
protein energy malnutrition (marasmus or PEM) |
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Definition
thin muscles, no fat, no edema (often also filled with parasites, which eat little food they do eat) seen in chronically ill, elderly on low/fixed incomes, low income groups, vegans, mentally retarded living alone, chronic substance abusers
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Term
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Definition
usually child stops being breastfed b/c mother becomes pregnant again, and is instead fed a gruel of staple food (corn, rice) which has low biological protein value on its own thin muscles, some fat, edema |
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Term
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Definition
- only energy-producing nutrient to contain nitrogen (becomes waste product of metabolism)
- most plentiful substance in body next to water (75% of body solids)
- 95% ingested broken down into amino acids (protein:amino acids as CHO:glucose)
- nitrogen balance is direct indication of protein status
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Term
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Definition
- furnish amnio acids necessary for building/reparing tissue
- formation of body secretions/fluids, enzymes, mucus, antibodies, hormones, hemoglobin
- regulates acid-base balance
- controsl osmotic pressure
- helps transport (lipoproteins transport lipids)
- source of energy (4cal/gram)
- produces immunoglobins for disease resistence
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Term
Essential amino acids (EAAs) |
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Definition
- all must be present in body simultaneously for synthesis
- needed for tissue growth and maintenance
- foods that contain the 8 EAAs in moderate amounts are complete proteins, which includes most animal proteins
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Term
Semiessential amino acids (SEAAs) |
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Definition
needed for tissue growth/maintenance in children aren't alone enough to support gorowth |
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Term
Nonessential amino acids (NEAAs) |
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Definition
need not be provided by diet can be synthesized in liver from other AAs |
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Term
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Definition
- broken down into amino acids
- digestion of AAs is slow
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Term
Protein metabolism/absorption |
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Definition
- absorbed as AAs through small intestine directly into liver circulation
- absorption requires energy, B6 and manganese
- nitrogen is removed and hydrolized to form ammonia, removed from blood, taken to liver, then kidneys, excreted in urine (75% of nitrogen is eliminated)
- keto acids=end product of deamination, may be oxidized for energy, used to make NEAAs,or converted to fats and stored as adipose tissue
- protein catabolism ends up with urea, creatinine, uric acid, ammonia salts
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Term
Number of different amino acid units |
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Definition
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Term
Protein digestion: stomach |
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Definition
- stomach: HCl denatures protein and enzyme
- pepsin breaks down protein into smaller polypeptides
- rennin breakds down casein (milok protein) and readies it for pepsin
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Term
Protein digestion: small intestine |
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Definition
- pancreatic enzymes convert polypeptides into dipeptides
- intestinal enzymes break down dipeptides into AAs
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Term
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Definition
- bio-availability/biological value, ability of protein to sustain life on its own (synthesize body proteins)
- net protein utilization (NPU): digestibility (cooking, acidity)
- high quality contains all EAAs and some non EAAs, mostly animal origin
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Term
absorption of amino acids |
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Definition
- absorbed by active transport and diffusion, with aid of vitamin B6 and energy
- most travel to liver, some metabolized in muscle
- liver removes excesses to prevent build-up, provides amino acids to tissues
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Term
consequences of too much or too little high-quality or well-combined protein |
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Definition
if too much, it stores excess as fat if too little, and not all EAAs are there, stores as energy/fat and waits for new influx |
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Term
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Definition
monitor for B12 deficiencies (only found in animal sources), possibly iron and calcium deficiencies |
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Term
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Definition
reaction to gluten gliadin in gluten is possible toxin that damages villi in intestine (flattens them) but is reversible lab tests indicate malnutrition other grains to use: rice, corn, sorghum |
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