How Nutrients Become You
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Transcript How Nutrients Become You
Foods and Nutrition
THE SIX NUTRIENT GROUPS
Carbohydrates
Fats
Proteins
Vitamins
Minerals
Water
Elements – simplest substance from which all
matter is formed
Matter – anything that takes up space and has a
measurable quantity
Atom – smallest part of an element
Molecule – smallest amount of a substance that
has all the characteristics of the substance
Compound molecule – atoms of different
elements bonded together
Carbohydrates, fats, proteins, vitamins, and
water are compounds
Hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and cobalt
common, least 25 chemical elements needed
Minerals are elements
Build and repair body tissues
Body continues to produce new cells until death
Need more during prenatal period, infancy, adolescence
Replace old cells
Repair damaged cells
Regulate body processes
Chemical reactions in body use nutrients
pH balance in blood, digestion, circulation of body
fluids, metabolism
Provide energy
Quality of food affects energy level
Necessary for all life processes (breathe, pump blood,
muscles move, body heat
Carbohydrates and fats main energy source
Protein other source of energy
Kilocalories
- amount of heat needed to raise
one kilogram of water one degree Celsius
Also called calories
1 gram of carbohydrates = 4 kilocalories of
energy
1 gram of fats = 9 kilocalories of energy
1 gram of proteins = 4 kilocalories of energy
Water, vitamin, minerals have no energy
value therefore no calories
Alcohol provides 7 calories per gram
Not a nutrient because it does not promote
growth: it’s a drug
Digestion- process by
which your body breaks
down food, and nutrients
on food into simpler
substances
Mechanical digestion –
happens as food is crushed
and churned
Chemical digestion – food
is mixed w/ acids and
enzymes
Enzymes- protein
produced by cells that
cause a specific chemical
reactions
Gastrointestinal (GI)tract –
muscular tube leading
from the mouth to the
anus
Absorption
– passage of nutrient from the
digestive tract into the circulatory or
lymphatic system
Most absorption happens in small intestines
Covered with villi – tiny, fingerlike projections
that give velvety texture
Water-soluble
Dissolve in water (capillaries absorb most water)
Fat-soluble
nutrients
nutrients
Dissolve in fat (lacteals absorb fat)
Absorption
completed in large intestines
All
the chemical changes that occur as cells
produce energy and material needed to
sustain life
Cells use compounds for energy or store to
replace cells
Stores energy as adenosine triphosphate
(ATP)
Waste removed through urinary system
Eating habits
What you eat and how you eat
Need fiber
Emotions
Fear, anger, and tension can lead to digestive
problems
Reduce stress
Food Allergies
Reaction to the immune system to a certain proteins
found in food.
Food sensitivity – reactions to food that do not involve
the production of antibodies by the immune system
Physical activity
Helps with digestion and metabolism
Strengthen muscles in internal organs
What is it?
Diarrhea
Constipation
Indigestion
Heartburn
Ulcer
Gallstones
Diverticulitis
Treatments