Slide 1 - Cengage Learning
Download
Report
Transcript Slide 1 - Cengage Learning
Chapter 11
Diet and Health
Nutrition: Concepts & Controversies, 12e
Sizer/Whitney
Learning Objectives
Describe relationships between immunity
and nutrition, and explain how malnutrition
and infection worsen each other.
Compare and contrast the progression and
the symptoms of heart disease in men and
women.
Describe what dietary and genetic factors
may affect CVD risks and why higher LDL
levels are a health concern.
Learning Objectives
Develop a general eating plan for a person
with prehypertension.
Speculate about possible mechanisms by
which a diet high in red meat might
increase the risk of breast cancer or
colorectal cancer.
Learning Objectives
Develop a healthy eating plan that reduces
the intake of trans fat and saturated fat but
maintains sufficient intakes of essential
nutrients.
Describe some recent advances in
nutritional genomics with regard to the
health of the body through life.
Introduction
Two types of diseases
Infectious and chronic
Nutrients and our body’s defenses
Hoaxes
Leading causes of death
Chronic diseases
Mixture of factors
The Ten Leading Causes of
Death in the United States
Nutrition and Immunity
Well-nourished
immune system
Provides
protection
Susceptible
groups
PEM
Malnutrition
Effects of Protein-Energy Malnutrition
(PEM) on the Body’s Defense Systems
The Concept of Risk Factors
Risk factors
Suspected contributors
Show correlation with the disease
Disease risk factors
Genetic
Environmental
Behavioral
Social
Dietary contributions to disease
Risk Factors and Chronic
Diseases
Interrelationships Among Chronic
Diseases
The Concept of Risk Factors
Estimating your risk
Search family’s
medical history
Laboratory tests
Cardiovascular Diseases
Disease of heart and blood vessels
Symptoms of heart attack and stroke
Minimizing risks
Heart is one of the least regenerative
organs
Heart disease
Men vs. women
U.S. Heart Disease Death Rates
Atherosclerosis
Hardening of the arteries
Everyone has signs
How advanced is the disease
Plaque formation
Damaging factors to vessel linings
Inflammation
Macrophages
Mineralization
The Formation of Plaques in
Atherosclerosis
Atherosclerosis
Plaque rupture
Blood clots
Abnormal blood
clotting
Omega-3 fatty
acids
Blood pressure
Risk Factors for CVD
Age, gender, and genetic inheritance
Nonmodifiable
High LDL and low HDL cholesterol
Higher the LDL the greater the risk
Most atherogenic lipoproteins
Higher HDL reduces risk
LDL oxidation
LDL, HDL, and Risk of Heart
Disease
Adults Standards for Blood Lipids, Body
Mass Index (BMI) and Blood Pressure
Risk Factors for CVD
Hypertension and atherosclerosis
Both worsen CVD
Worsen each other
Diabetes
Physical inactivity
Benefits of activity for heart health
Smoking
Risk Factors for CVD
Atherogenic diet
DASH eating plan
Obesity & metabolic syndrome
Cluster of risk factors
Inflammation
Increased risk of thrombosis
Other risk factors
Recommendations for Reducing
CVD Risk
Lifestyle changes
Increase physical activity
Lose weight
Implement dietary changes
Reduce exposure to tobacco smoke
Recommendations for Reducing
CVD Risk
Diet to reduce CVD risk
Reduce fat intake
Saturated and trans fats
Limit refined starches and added sugars
Eat fruits, vegetables, and whole grains
Diet rich in omega-3 fatty acids
Other dietary factors
Nutrition and Hypertension
One of most prevalent forms of CVD
No symptoms you can feel
Two numbers
Systolic pressure
Diastolic pressure
Prehypertension
Blood pressure checks at regular intervals
Nutrition and Hypertension
Blood pressure
Cardiac output
Factors causing an increase
Peripheral resistance
Factors causing an increase
Risk factors
Salt intake
Alcohol
The Blood Pressure
Nutrition and Hypertension
DASH diet
Health benefits beyond blood pressure
Weight control
Physical activity
Alteration of hormones
Salt or sodium
Alcohol
Minerals and vitamin C
Lifestyle Modifications to Reduce
Blood Pressure
Complementary and Alternative
Medicine
Complementary vs. alternative
Integrative medicine
National Center for Complementary and
Alternative Medicine (NCCAM)
http://nccam.nih.gov/
Accupuncture
Herbal medicines
Selected Herbs: Claims,
Evidence, and Risks
Selected Herbs: Claims,
Evidence, and Risks
Nutrition and Cancer
Prevention of cancer
Risk factors
Lifestyle factors
Environmental exposures
Diet
Dietary components
Relation to cancer
How Does Cancer Develop?
Cancer arises in the genes
DNA is damaged by carcinogen
Cellular repair or self-destruction
Cell loses ability to self-destruct
Replicates uncontrollably
Mass of abnormal tissue
Cancer prevention through tumor
development
Cancer Development
Which Diet Factors Affect Cancer
Risk?
Energy intake
Reduced caloric intakes
Cancer prevention only
Obesity
Depends on site of cancer & other factors
Physical activity
Alcohol
Fat and fatty acids
Which Diet Factors Affect Cancer
Risk?
Red meats and processed meats
Cooking
Smoking
Fiber-rich foods
Folate and antioxidant vitamins
Calcium and vitamin D
Iron
Food phytochemicals
The DASH Diet: Preventive
Medicine
Emphasized foods
Make only a few
dietary changes at
a time
Start with fruits &
vegetables
Nutritional Genomics: Can It
Deliver on Its Promises?
Controversy 11
Nutritional Genomics Research
Genome
Genetic profile
DNA microarray technology
DNA mutations
SNPs
Variation of a nucleotide
Epigenetics
Epigenome
Proteins and other molecules that regulate
expression of genes
Turning genes “on” and “off”
Inherited or altered
Regulation
Histones
Methyl groups
Two Epigenetic Factors and Gene
Activity
Bioactive Food Components and
Gene Expression
Epigenetics
Future generation effects
Embryonic development
Modifying your epigenome
Health implications
Bioactive constituents in whole foods
Genetic Testing
Arguments
Merits
Demerits
Nutritional genomics fraud
Genetic Testing: Pros and Cons