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Overview of Nutrition and Health

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Key vocabulary and definitions from Nutrition: For Health and Health Care By Linda DeBruyne and Kathryn Pinna Seventh Ed. Notes and statistics from the class lecture.









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Uploaded on
October 16, 2024
Number of pages
3
Written in
2020/2021
Type
Class notes
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Anonymous
Contains
Clinical nutrition chapter 1

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1.1 Lifestyle Choices/ Food Choices

● Consider cultural competence, genetics, habituation, emotional stability, and ethics.

Bioactive food Components: compounds in foods(either nutrients or phytochemicals), that alter
theological processes in the body.

Nutrients: substances used for energy in the body that promotes structure, growth,
maintenance, and repair.
- Essential Nutrients: must be obtained from food because their body can’t make them
itself in sufficient quantities.

Carbohydrates, Fats & Proteins
● Carbohydrates and fats are used as major fuels
○ Protein is used when carbohydrates and fats are not available

Vitamins, minerals and water DO NOT provide energy
● They facilitate the release of energy from energy-yielding nutrients
● These are considered inorganic because they do not contain carbon

Kilocalories: Measurement of Energy
● Carbohydrates: 4 kcalorie per gram
● Protein: 4 kcalorie per gram
● Fats: 9 kcalorie per gram

One Kcalorie is the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of 1 kg of water.

Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA): a set of values, reflecting the average daily amount
of nutrients considered adequate to meet the nutrient needs of practically all healthy people in a
particular life stage and gender group; a goal for dietary intake by individuals.

Adequate Intakes (AI): a set of values that are used as guides for nutrient intakes one scientific
evidence is insufficient to determine an RDA.

Estimated Average Requirements (EAR): the average daily nutrient intake levels estimated to
meet the requirements of half of all healthy individuals in a given age and gender group; used in
nutrition, research, and policymaking, and as the basis on which RDA values are set.

Tolerable Upper Intake Levels (UL): a set of values, reflecting the highest average daily nutrient
intake levels that are likely to pose no risk of toxicity to almost all healthy individuals in a
particular life, stage and gender group. As intake increases above the UL, potential risk of
adverse health effects increases.
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