Transcript Minerals
Minerals
Chapter 9
Nutrition for Sport and Exercise
Dunford & Doyle
Learning Objectives
Classify minerals and describe their
general roles
Explain how mineral inadequacies and
excesses can occur and why each might be
detrimental to performance and health
Describe the factors that increase,
maintain, and decrease bone mineral
density, including a discussion of the
minerals associated with bone formation
and their effects on performance and health
Learning Objectives
Describe the role of iron in red blood cell
formation and the impact of low iron intake
on performance and health
Describe the roles of minerals in the
immune system
Compare and contrast minerals based on
their source—naturally occurring in food,
added to foods during processing, and
found in supplements—including safety
and effectiveness
Introduction to Minerals
Minerals differ from vitamins in many ways
Inorganic (non-carbon containing) compounds
Not well absorbed
Not easily excreted
Medical tests can help measure amount in the
body
21 Essential Minerals
Classification of Minerals
2 categories based on amount found in
body:
• Macrominerals – found in large amounts
• Microminerals – found in small amounts
• Also known as “trace” minerals
Classification of Minerals
Functionality
• Proper bone formation
Ex/ Ca, Phos, Mg, Fl
• Electrolytes
Ex/ Na, K, Cl
• Red blood cells
Ex/ Iron
• Enzyme-related functions
Ex/ Zn, Se, Cu
Recommended Daily Mineral Intake
Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI)
• How much is enough?
Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL)
• How much is too much?
DRI’s established on 15 minerals
UL established for 16 minerals
Each mineral needed for proper
physiological functioning and good health
DRI is the standard for athletes
DRI and UL for Adult Males and Adult,
Nonpregnant Females
The Influence of Exercise on Mineral
Requirements
Mineral loss in sweat and urine may be
greater in athletes
• Ex/ Sodium, chloride, potassium
Some minerals may be conserved by body
and not as much will be lost in sweat
Small to moderate losses can be offset by
dietary intake
Larger losses may need supplementation
Consumption of excess minerals can be
detrimental to athlete
• Ex/ Iron, zinc
Average Mineral Intakes by Sedentary
Adults and Athletes
Men typically consume more minerals than
women
Many men and women do not consume an
adequate amount
In athletes, adequate mineral intake is
associated with adequate caloric intake
Likely if deficient in iron and zinc, that also
deficient in other trace minerals (Martinez et al, 2011)
If restricting caloric intake, mineral-fortified
foods are helpful
Average Mineral Intake in U.S.
Mineral Deficiency and Toxicity
Homeostasis is generally maintained by
the body by adjusting absorption and
excretion
• If storage is high, absorption decreases
• If storage is low, absorption increases
Hormonal and other mechanisms are also
influential
• Ex/ Calcium – absorption, excretion,
resorption all are regulated by hormones
Factors Influencing Mineral Absorption
Competition
Minerals can compete with each other for
absorption
• Divalent cations (two positively charged ions)
use same binding agents and cellular receptor
sites
Calcium
Iron
Zinc
Copper
Magnesium
Phytates, Oxalates, and Insoluble Fiber
Phytates and oxalates inhibit absorption of
iron, zinc, calcium, manganese by binding
with the mineral and blocking absorption
• Spinach, Swiss chard, seeds, nuts, legumes
Insoluble fiber decreases absorption of
calcium, magnesium, manganese, zinc by
decreasing transit time
• Contents of GI move more quickly through GI
tract resulting in less contact time with
mucosal cells
Clinical and Subclinical Mineral
Deficiencies
General characteristics
• Deficiencies develop over time
• No signs or symptoms initially
• Signs or symptoms are subtle and nonspecific when they first occur
• Specific symptoms associated with severe
deficiencies
Prevalence of Subclinical Mineral Deficiencies
Ex/ Iron deficiency without anemia
• Subclinical iron deficiency
• In U.S., 14% of children (aged 1-2 yrs), 4% of
children (aged 3-5 yrs), 9% of females (aged
12-49 yrs) (CDC 1012)
• Estimates in female adolescent and adult
athletes range from 25-36% (Auersperger et al, 2013)
• Prevalence may be higher in female
vegetarians
• Effect on performance not known, but it is
prudent to avoid this condition
Prevalence of Subclinical Mineral Deficiencies
Ex/ Osteopenia
• Subclinical calcium deficiency
• Low bone mineral density
• In U.S., 49% of women and 30% men >50 yrs
old (Looker et al, 2010)
• Estiamtes of athletes range from 11-22%
(Hoch et al, 2009)
• May be as high as 50% of amenorrheic
female distance runners and ballet dancers
Subclinical deficiencies of other minerals
not well documented
Prevalence of Clinical Mineral Deficiencies
Ex/ Iron-deficiency anemia
• Clinical iron deficiency
• In U.S., 3% of females 12-49 years old (CDC, 2012)
• Prevalence in female athletes estimated to be 3%
or more
• Prevalence in male athletes very low, but not zero
• Results in fatigue and impaired performance d/t
reduced aerobic capacity and endurance
• Iron deficiency anemia in distance runners higher
than general population (Malczewska et al., 2000)
Prevalence of Clinical Mineral Deficiencies
Ex/ Osteoporosis
• Clinical calcium deficiency
• In U.S., 8 million women and 2 million men >50
years old (Nat’l Osteoporosis Foundation, 2010)
• Loss of calcium from bone exacerbated when
estrogen production declines d/t menopause
• Amenorrhea (cessation of menstruation) can occur
d/t prolonged low kcal intake
• 10-13% of female distance runners <30 years of
age with amenorrhea (Khan et al., 2002)
• 6-7% of amenorrheic female elite distance runners
under 40 yrs have osteoporosis (Pollock et al, 2010)
Subclinical and Clinical Deficiency
Clinical mineral deficiencies can negatively
affect performance and undermine the
athlete’s health
Subclinical mineral deficiencies can impair
an athlete’s ability to train or perform and
put athlete’s health at risk
“The best defense is a good offense”
Important to consume nutrient-dense foods
in sufficient quantities to meet caloric needs
Toxicity
Mineral toxicities are rare, but do occur
Mineral supplementation has grown d/t:
• Link between minerals and chronic diseases
• Increased advertising for supplements
Supplement carefully to avoid toxicity
More people supplementing with single
minerals in higher amounts than would
occur naturally in foods
More foods now fortified with minerals
Multimineral Supplement
Bone-forming Minerals
At least 8 minerals involved in bone formation
80-90% of bone mineral content is calcium
and phosphorus incorporated into
hydroxyapatite crystals
Small amount of fluoride
Several minerals have indirect roles
• Magnesium – helps regulate bone metabolism
• Iron, zinc, copper – part of enzymes needed for
collagen synthesis
Bone Growth and Turnover
3 major bone growth processes:
1. Growth
•
Longitudinally (in length) and radially (in
thickness) – in children, adolescents
2. Modeling
•
Bones are reshaped in response to mechanical
force (weight-bearing activities) – mostly in
children, adolescents
3. Remodeling
•
Old bone that has been microdamaged is
replaced by new bone – mostly in adults
Bone Remodeling
Skeletal mass consists of:
1. Cortical bone
• ~ 80% of skeleton
• Shafts of the long bones and on the surface
• Compact in concentric circles
2. Trabecular bone
•
•
•
•
~ 20% of skeleton
Ends of the long bones and under the surface
Honeycomb-like structure
Greater surface volume, metabolic activity, and
turnover (Sherwood, 2013)
Trabecular and Cortical Bone
Bone Remodeling
Rate
• 1-2% of entire skeletal mass in adults is being
remodeled at any given time, but 20% of the
trabecular bone is being remodeled
• 10,000-20,000 new remodeling sites each day
• 1 million sites active at any given time
• Adult’s skeleton will have been completely
remodeled over 10 years’ time
Bone Remodeling
Length of time for remodeling at a certain
site (Heaney, 2001)
•
•
•
•
In children → weeks
In young adults → ~3 months
In adults → ~6-18 months
Most of time is spent in bone formation, not
breakdown
Bone Remodeling
“Bone turnover” is constant throughout life
• Process of existing bone being resorbed and new
bone being formed
Osteoclasts are cells that resorb bone
• Stimulated by physical activity and microfractures
• Stimulated by hormones – PTH and calcitriol
Osteoblasts are cells that form bone
Osteoclast/osteoblast balance
• In children and adolescents, deposition is favored
• In young adults, balance generally exists
• In middle aged to older adults, resorption is favored
Peak Mineral Density (PMD)
PMD is the highest bone mineral density
achieved during one’s lifetime
~ 40 to 60% of PMD is genetically determined
Increased mineral content until ~ age 35
• 95% adult skeleton formed by age 20
• 5% formed age 20-35 years (Rizzoli et al, 2010)
• PMD of trabecular bone achieved b/w 20-30
years of age
• PMD of cortical bone achieved b/w 30-35
years of age
Major Factors the Influence Peak Bone Mass
Figure 9-3 p339
PMD
Nutritional factors affecting PMD
• Low calcium intake during childhood and
adolescence can reduce PMD by 5-10%
• Achieving PMD is critical to long-term health –
average life expectancy 78.7 yrs (Hoyert and Xu, 2012)
• Vitamin D
Severe deficiency can cause rickets, increased
fractures, impaired bone growth/deformities
• Adequate protein intake in children associated
with bone growth and PMD
Amino acids needed to build matrix around bone
PMD
Mechanical factors affecting PMD
• Weight-bearing exercise stimulates bone to
increase bone mineral content over time
• Physically active people generally have
greater bone mineral density than those who
are sedentary
• Exercise-related factors that influence PMD:
Type, intensity, frequency of exercise
Age at which exercise was begun
Number of years exercise continues
• High impact activities should be encouraged
Having fun while building bone mass!
Figure 9-4 p340
Bone Loss is Associated with Aging
Natural consequence of aging
Slow mineral loss after ~ age 35
Accelerated mineral loss in females when estrogen
production declines (menopause)
Bone resorption increases with age and estrogen
deficiency
• Incomplete bone formation occurs when bone resorption
outpaces bone formation
• Formation may not equal resorption during remodeling
If dietary calcium is low, body must use calcium
reserves in bones to meet metabolic demands
Bone Loss is Associated with Aging
In women →
0.5 – 1.0% bone loss yearly until age 50
With estrogen deficiency (menopause) →
1 – 2% bone loss yearly
In older men →
~ 1% bone loss yearly
Calcium Homeostasis
Definition: Regulation of calcium in the
blood and extracellular fluid (ECF)
Primarily controlled by PTH, also calcitriol
Normal blood calcium 8.5-10.5 mg/dl
Calcium level is tightly regulated by
hormones (PTH and calcitriol) since it is
critical for proper nerve and muscle function
Half of calcium in blood is bound to proteins
and half is “free”, unbound – known as
ionized calcium (IC)
Calcium Homeostasis
Calcium can be quickly moved into the
ECF when concentrations are low – known
as “fast exchange”
• PTH activates calcium pumps in membranes
surrounding bone fluid
• Calcium is mobilized from bone fluid (not
mineralized bone)
• PTH also stimulates calcium resorption in
kidney and activates calcitriol, which
stimulates increased GI absorption of calcium
Calcium Regulation
Calcium Balance
Describes the body’s total absorption,
distribution, and excretion of calcium
Different from calcium homeostasis, but
related
Many people do not consume enough calcium
daily, which affects balance
Absorption and excretion can be increased or
decreased as needed to maintain balance
Bone turnover is balanced under normal
conditions
Calcium Absorption
In adults ~30% of calcium entering the GI
tract is absorbed
• So, a 1,000 mg daily intake of calcium from
food will result in about 300 mg being absorbed
Amount absorbed regulated by vitamin D
Absorption in adults ~10-50%
Absorption in children as high as 75%
Absorption from supplements varies
depending on composition, ranges 25-40%
Long-Term Low Calcium Intake
Bone turnover is not balanced
“Slow exchange” of calcium
• Used to make available the calcium needed due to
inadequate dietary intake
• PTH stimulates dissolution of bone
• Increases osteoclastic activity and decreases
osteoblastic activity
• Calcium (and phosphate) released from bone
Calcium used to maintain blood calcium in normal range
Phosphate excreted in urine
• Over time, integrity of bone is decreased
Bone Loss is Associated w/ Lack of Estrogen
Decrease in estrogen is associated with
an increase in osteoclast proliferation and
activity
Estrogen deficiency may be associated
with increased erosion depth in trabecular
bone
Estrogen deficiency d/t menopause (>50
years) or amenorrhea / oligomenorrhea
(absent or irregular menstruation)
• Distance runners, ballerinas, gymnasts at risk
Bone Loss is Associated w/ Lack of Estrogen
When both energy and estrogen
deficiencies are present in exercising
women, bone formation is suppressed and
bone resorption is increased (De Souza et al, 2008)
• This predisposes women to failure to achieve
PMD, loss of calcium from bone, alterations in
bone structure, greater incidence of stress
fractures, osteopenia, and osteoporosis
(Ackerman et al, 2011)
• Estrogen deficiency not only associated w/ age!
Preventing or Reducing Bone Loss
Associated with Aging
Loss of calcium can be slowed by 1% per
yr b/w attainment of PMD and menopause
via adequate intake of calcium
• Bone calcium loss reduced/prevented in many
middle-age men and women if calcium intake
is adequate (Bonura, 2009)
Calcium when supplemented w/ vitamin D
may reduce risk for fracture in elderly
(DIPART, 2010)
Preventing or Reducing Bone Loss
Associated with Aging
• In women after age 70, calcium
supplementation is beneficial (Morgan, 2001)
• Calcium intake is usually inadequate
• Reduced vitamin D absorption/conversion
Exercise-related
• High-intensity weight-bearing activities
• Resistance training
• Other types of exercise are beneficial, but do
not slow bone loss
It is Important to Meet the Recommended
Dietary Intakes for Calcium and Vitamin D
Recommended Dietary Intakes of Calcium
Calcium – DRI updated in 2010
• Greatest amount needed for ages 9 to 18 yrs
DRI is 1,300 mg/day
• Substantial need throughout adulthood
DRI is 1,000 to 1,200 mg/day
Average adult female intake is ~ 650 mg/day
from food (only ~30% absorbed)
Average adult male intake is ~ 925 mg/day
• Tolerable upper intake
• 2,500 mg/day for age 50 and less
• 2,000 mg/day for age 51 and up
• At risk for kidney stones if exceed TUL (IOM, 2010)
Dietary Strategies for Adequate
Consumption of Bone-Related Minerals
Calcium sources
• Milk and milk products
8 oz glass of milk = 300 mg Calcium
• Yogurt, cheese, ice cream
• Reduced lactose or lactase-treated milk
products
• Some green leafy vegetables
Cabbage, broccoli, greens
• Calcium-fortified foods
OJ, cereal, sports bars, soy milk
• Calcium supplements
Milk and milk products are excellent sources of
calcium.
Those with lactose intolerance may use some of the
products shown, which allows them to include
calcium-dense dairy foods in their diets.
Dark green vegetables are good nondairy sources of
calcium. 1 cup broccoli = ~100 mg calcium.
Soy milk and rice drinks are often
fortified with calcium.
Dietary Strategies for Adequate Consumption
of Other Bone-Related Minerals
Phosphorus, fluoride, and magnesium
involved in bone health
• Phosphorus is abundant in food; deficiency
unlikely
• Fluoride is added to vitamins or water
Contact local water agency for fluoride content of
tap water
• Magnesium is in green leafy vegetables, nuts,
beans, seeds, whole grains, hard water
Roles of Minerals in Blood Formation
3 types of cells in blood:
• Erythrocytes – RBCs
• Leukocytes – WBCs
• Platelets – assists with clotting
Functions of Erythrocytes
• Primary: Transport oxygen
• Secondary: Transport CO2, nitric oxide
Roles of Minerals in Blood Formation
Hemoglobin
• “heme” = iron; “globin” = protein
• Iron-containing protein found in the RBCs that can
bind oxygen
• Iron (Fe) is at the center of heme portion
4 bonds with nitrogen
1 bond with amino acid
1 bond with oxygen
Each Hgb molecule contains 4 heme molecules
• Normal Hgb levels 15 g/dl (males), 14 g/dl (females)
• 30 trillion RBCs – each contains > 250 million molecules
of hemoglobin
Simplified Hemoglobin and Heme
Molecules
Roles of Minerals in Blood Formation
Sufficient oxygen-carrying capacity is
critical for athletes, especially endurance
athletes
Hematocrit
• Amount of RBCs in total volume of plasma (%)
• 42% for women and 45% for men is normal
Anemia
• Reduced oxygen-carrying capacity
• Hematocrit < 30%
• Nutritional or non-nutritional
Nutritional Anemia
Nutritional anemias are a result of nutrient
deficiency d/t low intake or poor absorption
Iron deficiency is the most prevalent
25% of body’s iron is stored in liver,
spleen, and bone marrow
Most adults have sufficient iron stores
• Some males with maximum iron storage could
sustain normal Hgb levels for up to 2 years
while consuming an iron-poor diet (Shah, 2004)
Anemia
Some adults may experience higher-thannormal blood loss resulting in iron deficiency
• GI bleed
• Surgery
• Menstruation
Iron deficiency anemia results in decreased
number of RBCs, smaller cells, and lower
concentration of Hgb per cell
Fatigue is most common symptom of iron
deficiency
Figure 9-12 p351
Anemia
Ferritin
• Storage form of iron
• Amount of ferritin circulating in blood indicates
amount stored
• As amount of storage iron declines, the
amount of ferritin in the blood declines
• Repeated tests over time are valuable
• Ex/ An athlete has ferritin level checked every 6
mos: 120, 110, 85, 63
• Ferritin < 100 ng/ml may be referred to as
“functional iron deficiency”
Iron Deficiency, Iron-Deficiency Anemia,
and Performance
Iron-deficiency anemia impairs performance
• VO2max (aerobic capacity) can decline 10-50%
due to impaired oxygen transport (Haas & Brownlie, 2001)
• Endurance capacity declines
Aerobic capacity does not appear to decline
in iron deficiency without anemia
(subclinical deficiency) – normal Hgb, HCT
and oxygen transport is normal
Recommendation is for athletes to maintain
a normal iron status
Prevalence of Iron Deficiency and
Iron-Deficiency Anemia in Athletes
Unlikely in most males
• Occasionally seen in adolescent males or male
endurance athletes
Female adolescent and adult athletes
• Research indicates range from 25-36% (Auersperger
et al, 2013)
Some medications induce bleeding and
loss of iron (aspirin, ibuprofen)
Greatest risk is for menstruating females
Prevalence of Iron Deficiency and
Iron-Deficiency Anemia in Athletes
Athletes with low caloric intake at greater risk
Be careful of false (runner’s) anemia – Hgb
is low d/t plasma volume expansion associated
w/ endurance training
• Actual Hgb amount is normal but is “diluted”
High-volume endurance training results in
inflammation, which stimulates hepcidin
• Hepcidin = hormone that influences how much iron
absorbed and transported out of cells
• Hepcidin & iron decreased in female distance
runners engaged in high-volume training
(Auersperger et al, 2013)
Dietary Strategies for Adequate
Consumption of Blood-Related Minerals
DRI for females aged 19-50 is 18 mg vs.
DRI for males aged 19-50 is 8 mg
• Females lose iron through menstruation and
must replace it via diet
Adequate energy intake
6-7 mg iron typically consumed for every
1,000 kcals (in U.S.)
Variety of iron-dense foods
• Iron is found in many foods, but often in small
amounts.
• Adequate dietary iron intake is associated with
adequate energy intake.
Table 9-13 p353
Dietary Strategies for Adequate
Consumption of Blood-Related Minerals
Heme sources are better absorbed (15-35%)
than nonheme sources (2-20%)
• Heme = animal
• Nonheme = plant
Vitamin C increases nonheme iron absorption
“MFP factor” – consuming animal food with
plant food enhances nonheme absorption
Dietary Strategies for Adequate
Consumption of Blood-Related Minerals
Copper
• Copper-containing enzyme is needed for RBC
formation
Necessary for conversion of iron from its storage
form (ferrous) to its transport form (ferric)
• Seafood, nuts and seeds are best sources,
also dried beans, whole grains and some
green leafy vegetables
• DRI is 900 mcg
• Excessive zinc can interfere with copper
absorption
Minerals and Immune System Function
Intense training and prolonged exercise are
immunosuppressive
• Marathon runners have greatly increased risk
for URI (Nieman, 2008)
Moderate exercise improves immune system
function
Adequate protein and total energy intake
associated with proper immune system
function
Also, inadequate intake of zinc, magnesium,
and selenium impairs immune response
Minerals and Immune System Function
Zinc
• Cofactor in > 200 enzyme systems
• Involved in various immune functions
• DRI
8 mg/day for females
11 mg/day for males
• Zinc deficiency results in damaged skin & GI cells
• Excessive intake of zinc decreases lymphocyte
response and inhibits copper and iron absorption
• Most endurance athletes (90%) do not meet DRI
• Sources: red meat, milk
Minerals and Immune System Function
Selenium
• Involved in cellular and immune system
function
• Depressed immunity associated with
selenium deficiency
• Athletes not typically deficient in selenium
• Sources: meat, fish, poultry, whole grains,
and nuts
Iron
• Plays important role in immune system
functions
• Greater risk for infection if iron deficient
• Excessive iron impairs immune function
Adequate Intake of All Minerals
Tips for obtaining minerals from food:
1. Consume adequate kcals daily
2. Eat a variety of nutrient dense foods that are
minimally processed
3. Consume adequate amount of calcium and
iron in diet
“Rule of thumb” – if Ca and Fe intake is sufficient
in diet then other minerals likely sufficient as well
4. Avoid high sugar/high fat diets – they often
do not meet daily mineral requirements
A nutritious diet contains adequate kilocalories and a
variety of foods, such as those shown here.
This dietary pattern is likely to provide sufficient
carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, and minerals.
An Example of a High-Fat, High-Sugar,
Low-Fiber Diet
An Example of a Nutrient-Dense, WholeFoods Diet
Mineral Fortification or Supplementation
Mineral-fortified foods
• Some foods have many minerals added
Cereals, energy bars
Multimineral supplements
• Dosages may exceed the DRI or UL
• Degree of absorption is not known
• Minerals often decrease absorption of other
minerals
Supplementing with Individual Minerals
“Food First, Supplements Second” philosophy
Calcium and iron are most common
Should be physician-prescribed, not selfprescribed
Likely to affect absorption of other minerals
High bioavailability may not be desirable
• Bioavailability refers to the degree to which a
substance is absorbed, utilized, and retained in the
body
• Goal is adequate bioavailability, not high
bioavailability
Chromium Supplements for Athletes
Chromium picolinate is highly absorbable form
• More chromium absorbed than would be from food
Enhances insulin sensitivity, glucose utilization
Excess chromium can result in increased free
radical production, damage to cells
DRI for adults 20 – 35 mcg (depends on
gender and age)
Doses less than 200 mcg seem safe
Effectiveness for increasing muscle mass and
decreasing body fat unclear
Questions?
Do minerals provide kcals?
Do minerals provide energy?
Does exercise increase mineral
requirements about what is recommended
for healthy adults?
Does iron deficiency anemia impact
athletic performance?
Summary
More than 20 minerals are needed for the
proper functioning of the body
Extreme intakes – too little or too much –
are detrimental to health
Athletes in training are unlikely to need
more than the DRI
Adequate mineral intake is associated with
adequate caloric intake and a variety of
nutrient dense foods
Summary
• Adequate calcium intake is critical across
the lifecycle to maintain calcium
homeostasis, calcium balance, and bone
mineral density
• Iron-deficiency anemia impairs endurance
performance
• A “food first, supplements second” policy
can serve athletes well