MINERALS - Wilkes-Barre Area Career & Technical Center
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Transcript MINERALS - Wilkes-Barre Area Career & Technical Center
MINERALS
Chapter
7
Minerals
J Pistack
MINERAL FUNCTIONS
Inorganic
Become part of body composition
Represent 4% of total body
weight
Help to regulate bodily functions
Essential to good health
MINERAL CLASSIFICATIONS
Major
(macrominerals)
More than 5 grams
(approximately 1 tsp) in body
Need 100 milligrams (1/50 tsp)
intake daily
Trace (microminerals)—less
than 5 grams
INTAKE REQUIREMENTS
Major—100
milligrams
(approximately 1/50 teaspoonful)
or more per day
Trace—less than 100
milligrams per day
Ultratrace—less than 1
milligram per day
MAJOR MINERALS
Calcium
Sodium
Potassium
Phosphorus
Magnesium
Sulfur
Chloride
CALCIUM
Functions
Provides hardness to bones and teeth
Assists in the manufacture of ACH
Serves as catalyst in muscle
contractions
Performs as catalyst in blood clotting
AIs (adequate intake)
Ages 19 to 50 years: 1000 milligrams
Older than 50 years: 1200 milligrams
UL (upper level)—2500 milligrams for
adults
CALCIUM SOURCES
Animal
products—milk, sardines,
clams, oysters, salmon
Plant products
Rhubarb, spinach, greens, broccoli
Cooking increases availability
Fortified foods
CALCIUM DEFICIENCIES
Osteoporosis—bone
mineral density (BMD)
Greatest risk—postmenopausal, faircomplexioned white women
Result—fractures
Spine
Hip
Forearm (sentinel event)
Two factors affecting bone health and growth
Smoking
Alcohol consumption
CALCIUM DEFICIENCIES (CONTINUED)
Tetany—MEDICAL
EMERGENCY
Low ionized calcium in blood
(hypocalcemia)
Diagnostic signs
Chvostek sign—tapping over facial nerve
twitch of the facial muscles
Trousseau sign—B/P cuff pressure spasms
of the forearm and hand
CALCIUM TOXICITY
Hypercalcemia
Caused by diseases, usually not diet
Can cause calcium deposits in soft tissues
Milk-alkali syndrome
Recent causes: excessive calcium carbonate ingestion
to prevent osteoporosis
PHOSPHORUS FUNCTIONS
Calcium
phosphate provides hardness
to bones and teeth
Component of DNA and RNA
Contained in almost all enzymes
Part of buffering compounds to
maintain proper blood pH
PHOSPHORUS DEFICIENCY AND TOXICITY
Deficiency
Uncommon due to diet in healthy
person
Drug interactions, disease, starvation
Toxicity
Cow’s milk in very young infants
Potassium phosphate laxatives and
enemas
SODIUM FUNCTIONS AND SOURCES
Functions
Maintains fluid balance
Helps transmit impulses along nerves
and muscle fibers
Sources
Table salt—2 grams per teaspoonful
Milk products, processed foods, some
vegetables
POTASSIUM FUNCTIONS AND SOURCES
Functions
Helps to control fluid balance
Helps transmit impulses along nerves
and muscle fibers
Present
in all plant and animal cells
Fats, oils, and white sugar have
negligible amounts
POTASSIUM DEFICIENCIES
Alkalosis
Potassium-wasting
diuretics
Related to diet only in severe proteinenergy malnutrition
Losses due to diarrhea, vomiting, laxative
abuse
Over hydration with plain water by
perspiring athletes
Increased losses in urine, stool, or sweat
POTASSIUM TOXICITY
Rarely
caused by diet
Diseases—diabetes, burns, crushing
injuries
Correct administration of intravenous
potassium critical to health
MAGNESIUM FUNCTIONS
Associated
with ADP and ATP in energy
metabolism
Aids in transmission of nerve impulses
Influences cardiac and smooth muscle
contractility
MAGNESIUM SOURCES
Green
vegetables (magnesium is a
part of the chlorophyll molecule)
Coffee,
tea, cocoa
MAGNESIUM DEFICIENCY AND TOXICITY
Deficiency
Malabsorption disorders—vomiting or
diarrhea
Excessive alcohol use with poor nutrition
Chronic diuretic use
Diabetes
Toxicity
usually doesn’t build except for kidney disease
SULFUR
Adult
body contains approximately 175
grams
Component of cytoplasm of every cell.
Found in hair, skin, and nails; contributes
to their shape
Component of thiamin, biotin, insulin,
heparin, and the amino acids methionine
and cysteine.
Combines with toxins to neutralize them.
CHLORIDE
Major
role in maintaining fluid and acid–
base balance
88% is found in extracellular fluids—
stomach
12% is found in intracellular fluids
Released by white blood cells
Mostly absorbed through the small intestine
Excreted primarily by kidney as a result of
sodium regulation
TRACE MINERALS
Iron
Iodine
Fluoride
Zinc
Selenium
Chromium
Copper
Manganese
Cobalt
Molybdenum
ULTRATRACE
Arsenic
Boron
Nickel
Silicon
Vanadium
These appear in the UL tables but RDAs or AIs are
not determinable
IRON
Essential
Primary
in formation of hemoglobin
storage form in body is ferritin
Selectively
absorbed
IRON DEFICIENCY
Most
significant worldwide
deficiency
Groups at risk: infants, young
children, adolescents, childbearing
women
30%–50% post bariatric patients
IRON TOXICITY
Poisoning—most
common cause of
pediatric poisoning in United States
Hemochromatosis
- is an inherited blood
disorder that causes the body to retain
excessive amounts of iron
Cooking
in iron pots
IODINE
Found
in iodide form in the body
Average adult body contains 15–20
mg
70%–80% found in thyroid gland
Main function—synthesis of thyroid
hormones
Intake from saltwater shellfish, fish,
seaweed
FLUORIDE
Major
contribution to human health
relates to its role in preventing
dental caries
Contained in public U.S. drinking
water
Overdose rare—large volumes of
instant tea or secretive eating of
toothpaste with fluoride
ZINC
Adult
humans contain 1.5 to 2.5 grams
Found in all tissues, organs, and body
fluids
86% in skeletal muscle and bones
Abundant in central nervous system,
where it affects transmission of impulses
Essential for tissue growth because it
synthesizes DNA/RNA
ZINC DEFICIENCY
In
children
Growth retardation
Skeletal abnormalities
Delayed sexual maturation
In adults
Alopecia
Loss of taste sensation
Poor wound healing
Impaired immunity
ZINC TOXICITY
Swallowed
coins that released zinc
into the body
Overuse
adhesive
of zinc-containing denture
COPPER
Found
in all body tissues and most
secretions
Involved in hemoglobin synthesis
and cell respiration
Required for melanin pigment
formation
COPPER DEFICIENCY
Occur from
Taking medications that decrease stomach acidity
Consuming zinc supplements—typically
40 milligrams or more per day
Gastrointestinal diseases causing malabsorption
Some kidney diseases increase copper loss
Long-term complication of bariatric surgery
Cause
Bone abnormalities
Impaired immune function
Depigmentation of the skin and hair
COPPER TOXICITY
Wilson
disease - is a rare inherited disorder
that causes excess copper to accumulate in the
body. Steadily increasing amounts of copper
circulating in the blood are deposited primarily in
the brain, liver, kidneys, and the cornea of the
eyes. WD is fatal if it is not recognized and
treated
SELENIUM
Highest
concentrations occur in the
thyroid gland, kidneys, liver, heart,
pancreas, and muscle
Integral to more than 25 enzymes that
primarily function as antioxidants
SELENIUM TOXICITY AND DEFICIENCY
Rare
in meat-eating humans with
following exceptions:
Taking phenylketonuria formulas
Receiving parenteral nutrition as sole
source of nutrients
Consuming ketogenic diets – diets that
give rise to ketone bodies in
metabolism.
SELENIUM DEFICIENCY
Signs
and symptoms
Poor growth
Muscle pain and weakness
Depigmentation of hair and skin
Whitening of nail beds
CHROMIUM
High
concentrations are found in the
kidney, liver, muscle, spleen, heart,
pancreas, and bone
Vitamin C may enhance absorption
Antacids and phytate (A phosphoruscontaining compound that binds with minerals in
the gastrointestinal tract and decreases their
bioavailability which decreases absorption)
CHROMIUM DEFICIENCY AND TOXICITY
Individuals
receiving parenteral nutrition
without chromium have shown these signs
of deficiency:
Weight loss
Peripheral neuropathy
Impaired glucose utilization
High plasma levels of free fatty acids
Toxicity can cause
Liver dysfunction/failure
Anemia
MANGANESE
The
body contains 10 to 20 milligrams
of manganese
Found in highest concentrations in the
bones, liver, pancreas, and kidneys
Involved in the formation of bone and
cartilage
MANGANESE DEFICIENCY
Signs
and symptoms
Dermatitis
Decreased growth of hair and nails
Changes in hair color
COBALT
Necessary for red blood cell formation
ULTRATRACE MINERALS
Molybdenum—binds to copper, thought to
diminish copper toxicities effects such as in
Wilson disease
Arsenic
Boron
Nickel
Silicon
Vanadium
OTHER MINERALS THAT AFFECT HEALTH
Aluminum
Lead
Mercury
MINERAL SUPPLEMENTATION
Most
beneficial healthy minerals can
be supplemented by food intake
If supplementation is necessary with
medication, make sure it meets daily
requirements—not too much, little
Make sure to tell health care
providers what supplements you
take