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Discover why your body needs food for growth and energy, as we delve into the 6 essential nutrient groups: Vitamins, Minerals, Water, Carbohydrates, Fats, Proteins. Learn about calorie energy, types of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins, and the roles of vitamins and minerals. Find out how to maintain a healthy diet following USDA guidelines and interpret food labels for optimal nutrition intake. Enhance your understanding of nutrients to support overall well-being and vitality.
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Unit 10: Food and Digestion
Why You Need Food • Food provides your body with materials for growing and gives you energy. • Nutrients- the substances in food that provide the raw materials and energy that the body needs.
6 Groups of Essential Nutrients • Vitamins • Minerals • Water • Carbohydrates • Fats • Proteins
Energy • Calorie- The amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of one gram of water by one degree Celsius. • Used to measure the amount of energy in foods. • You need a certain amount of calories each day, depending on your age and level of physical activity.
Carbohydrates • Made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. • 1 gram of carb. = 4 Calories of energy • Carbs. provide the raw materials to make cell parts. • 45-60% of your diet should come from carbs.
Simple Carbohydrates • Glucose- a simple carb. that is the main source of fuel for cells. • Most foods do not contain glucose, your body makes it from other types of sugar. • Glucose is the form of sugar that your body can most easily use.
Complex Carbohydrates • Made of many sugar molecules that are linked together. • Starch- a complex carb. found in potatoes, rice, wheat, and corn. • Your body breaks down starch to get energy. • Fiber- complex carb. found in plants. Cannot be broken down into sugar by the body.
- Food and Energy Carbohydrates • In addition to providing energy, carbohydrates provide the raw materials to make cell parts.
Fats • Made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen • One gram of fat = 9 Calories of energy • Functions of fats: • Make up cell membrane • Protects internal organs • No more than 30% of daily intake should come from fat.
- Food and Energy Fats • Many foods contain saturated, unsaturated, and trans fats. Unsaturated fats are considered to be more healthful than saturated fats and trans fats.
Proteins • Made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, and nitrogen • Needed for tissue growth/repair and chemical reactions. • 10-35% of your daily diet should come from proteins.
Amino Acids- link together to make proteins. • There are 20 amino acids. • Your body can make some amino acids. • Essential amino acids- must come from foods you eat.
Complete proteins- contain all of the 20 amino acids, come from animals • Ex: meat and eggs • Incomplete proteins- only have some amino acids, come from plants • Ex: beans, grains, nuts • To get all of the essential amino acids, you must have a varied diet.
Vitamins and Minerals • Your body only needs very small amounts. • Do not provide energy. • Help body carry out processes. • Vitamins- helper molecules for chemical reactions. • - Ex: Vitamin K helps blood clot
Fat-soluble vitamins- stored in fatty tissues in the body. • Water-soluble vitamins- dissolve in water, not stored in the body. • Scurvy-disease caused by lack of vitamin C. Causes bleeding gums, stiff joints, and wounds that won’t heal.
- Food and Energy Vitamins and Minerals • Vitamins act as helper molecules in a variety of chemical reactions in the body.
Minerals- nutrients that are not made by living things. • Present in soil, absorbed through plant roots. • Calcium- needed for strong bones. • Iron- needed for red blood cell function. • Both vitamins and minerals are needed in small amounts to help chemical reactions occur.
- Food and Energy Vitamins and Minerals • Nutrients that are not made by living things are called minerals.
Water • Makes up about 65% of your weight. • The most important essential nutrient because all of the body’s processes take place in water. • Normal recommended daily amount of water = 2 liters/day
Guidelines for a Healthy Diet • United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)- provides personalized guidelines to stay healthy • 13-year-old girl needs 1600-2200 Calories/day. • 13-year-old boy needs 1800-2400 Calories/day
Food Labels • Allow you to evaluate a single food or compare two different foods. • Serving Size- the size of a single serving and how many are in the container. • Calories- how much energy you get from one serving. • Percent Daily Value- how the nutritional content of one serving fits into the diet. Based on a 2,000 Cal/day diet.
Ingredients- listed in order by weight, starting with the main ingredient. • Dietary Reference Intakes (DRIs)- amount of nutrients needed every day.
- Healthy Eating Food Labels • Food labels allow you to evaluate a single food as well as to compare the nutritional value of two different foods. 1. Serving Size: This information tells you the size of a single serving and the number of servings in the container. 2. Calories: This information tells you how much energy you get from one serving of this food, including how many calories come from fat. 3. Percent Daily Value: The Percent Daily Value shows you how the nutritional content of one serving fits into the recommended diet for a person who consumes 2,000 calories a day. 4. Ingredients: The ingredients are listed in order by weight, starting with the main ingredient.
- Food and Energy Percentages • A percentage (%) is a ratio that compares a number to 100. For example, 30% means 30 out of 100. • Suppose that a person eats a total of 2,000 calories in one day. Of those calories, 300 come from protein. Follow these steps to calculate the percentage of calories that come from protein. • 1. Write the comparison as a fraction: • 2. Multiply the fraction by 100% to express it as a percentage:
Practice Problem Suppose that 540 calories of the person’s 2,000 calorie total come from fats. What percentage of the calories come from fats? 27% - Food and Energy Percentages
Digestion • 3 functions of the digestive system: • Breaks down food into molecules • Absorbs molecules into the blood • Eliminates wastes from the body • Digestion- the process by which the body breaks down food. - Mechanical- food is physically broken down. Ex: Chewing food - Chemical- chemicals break foods down. Ex: Amylase breaking down starch.
Absorption- the process by which nutrients pass through the wall of your digestive system into your blood. • Materials that are not absorbed are eliminated.
- The Digestive Process Begins The Mouth • Both mechanical and chemical digestion begin in the mouth.
- The Digestive Process Begins The Mouth • The shape of an enzyme molecule is specific to the shape of the food molecule it breaks down. Here an enzyme breaks down a starch into sugars.
The Esophagus • Esophagus- muscular tube that connects the mouth to the stomach. • Epiglottis- flap of tissue that seals off the wind-pipe when you swallow. Makes food go down the esophagus instead of the wind-pipe. • Mucus- thick, slippery substance produced by the body. Lines the esophagus. • Peristalsis- wave-like motion caused by contractions of smooth muscles in the esophagus.
The Stomach • Stomach- J-shaped muscular pouch located in the abdomen. • Mechanical and chemical digestion happen in the stomach. • - Mechanical digestion- churning • - Chemical digestion- digestive juice • *Pepsin- enzyme in digestive juice • * Hydrochloric Acid- strong acid in digestive juice • Stomach is lined with mucus, prevents stomach acid from burning the stomach cells.
- The Digestive Process Begins The Stomach • Most mechanical digestion and some chemical digestion occur in the stomach.
Final Digestion and Absorption • Small Intestine- part of digestive system where most chemical digestion takes place. • About 6 meters long. • Named for its small diameter- 2 to 3 cm wide. • Almost all chemical digestion and absorption takes place in the small intestine.
- Final Digestion and Absorption The Small Intestine • The small intestine is the part of the digestive system where most chemical digestion takes place.
- Final Digestion and Absorption The Small Intestine • Tiny finger-shaped projections called villi line the inside of the small intestine. Villi absorb nutrient molecules. The molecules pass from the villi into blood vessels. Villi increase surface area.
The Liver • Liver- located in the upper right portion of the abdomen. • Largest organ inside the body. • Role of the liver in the digestive system is to produce bile. • Bile- molecule that breaks up fat particles. • Gallbladder- bile comes here from the liver, bile is stored here. • Bile physically breaks up food.
The Pancreas • Pancreas- triangular shaped organ between the stomach and small intestine. • In the digestive system, produces enzymes that flow into the small intestine and help break up starches, proteins, and fats.
The Large Intestine • Large Intestine- last section of the digestive system. • About 1.5 meters long • Named for its wide diameter (about 6 cm). • Contains helpful bacteria that aid in digestion and produce vitamins (Vitamin K). • Absorbs water into the bloodstream.
The End • After undigested food passes through the large intestine, it is eliminated from the body. • Rectum- short tube at the end of the digestive tract where waste material is converted into a solid. • Anus- muscular opening at the end of the rectum where waste material is eliminated from the body.