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Carbohydrates . Part One: A. Classification B. Digestion & Absorption of CHO. Carbohydrate Is Made by Photosynthesis. CHO. Carbohydrate Classifications. Simple CHO = “Sugars” Monosaccharides: single sugar unit Disaccharides: two sugar units linked together
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Carbohydrates Part One: A. Classification B. Digestion & Absorption of CHO
Carbohydrate Classifications • Simple CHO = “Sugars” • Monosaccharides: single sugar unit • Disaccharides: two sugar units linked together • Complex CHO= Starch, glycogen, fiber • Polysaccharides: many sugar units linked together
Simple CHO: Sugars • Monosaccharides • Disaccharides
condensation hydrolysis
Simple Sugars, Cont. • What is sugar good for? • When is sugar considered to be “bad?”
10% recommendation • (current U.S. 24%) • high sugar diet can change in fat distribution toward central adiposity • binge trigger in some, inhibitor in others – highly individual
fructose/levulose glucose/dextrose honey/invert sugar fruit juice concentrate corn syrup corn sweetener molasses raw sugar turbinado sugar Sugar on the Food Label
Sugar Alcohols • E.g. mannitol, sorbitol, xylitol • Considered “sugar free” sweeteners, but still almost the same kcals as sugar • Sugar free candy -- diarrhea if eaten in excess
A word about lactose: milk sugarand lactose intolerance • Enzyme lactase splits lactose into glu-gal in the small intestine • Lactase deficiency causes trouble digesting milk products
Carbohydrate Classifications • Simple CHO = “Sugars” • Monosaccharides: single sugar unit • Disaccharides: two sugar units linked together • Complex CHO= Starch, glycogen, fiber • Polysaccharides: many sugar units linked together
Complex CHO: Polysaccharides:Several to Hundreds of ____________ Units Linked Together • Starch – • Glycogen – • Fiber –
Starch • Long straight or branched chains of hundreds of __________________ units • Sources: • Richest source: • Legumes • Tubers
When eaten, ALL starches are broken down enzymatically to ______________ • (blue dots!) • One to 4 hours after a meal, all starch __________________
Glycogen • Storage form of CHO in animals. Not found in diet. • More complex and more highly branched than starch • Limitedcapacity for storage
Muscle Glycogen • Liver Glycogen
Fiber • Typical U.S. diet: • Most fibers are polysaccharides but
Most common fibers: cellulose, hemicellulose, and pectin. Also gums, mucilages, and lignins • Sources:
Whole Vs. Refined Grains • Whole grains • Label:
Refined grains • Label: • Sources:
“Enriched” • When bran and germ are removed, several vitamins/minerals also • “enriched,” • Shoot for at least half of your grains to be from whole grain sources
Soluble vs. Insoluble fiber • Soluble fiber • foods: barley, fruits (apples), legumes, oats, oat bran, rye, seeds, vegetables, nuts • Health benefits: • lowers serum cholesterol • stool bulk/softening
Insoluble fiber • Foods: brown rice/whole grains/wheat bran, fruits, legumes, seeds, veggies • Health benefits: • Speeds transit through intestines • delayed starch hydrolysis: slowed glu absorption
If you have a low-fiber diet, add fiber gradually! • What about fiber supplements?
Carbohydrates Digestion and absorption of CHO
D&A of CHO • Mouth Salivary amylase starch dextrins & maltose glu-glu-glu-glu-glu-glu glu-glu-glu-glu-glu-glu-glu-glu-glu x100 glu-glu
Stomach • Mechanical digestion continues in stomach, but
Small Intestine Starch and dextrins Pancreatic amylase maltose glu-glu glu-glu-glu-glu-glu-glu
Last phase: The brushborder cells of the small intestine. • Enzymes in these cells break down ___________________ to _____________________. (maltase) maltose glu & ________ (lactase) lactose glu & ________ (sucrase) glu & ________ sucrose
Monosaccharides are ABSORBED • In liver, fru and gal are converted to glu • ____________ then regulates the release of glu back into the bloodstream for transport to tissues.
Large Intestine (colon) • Fiber • (absorbed & used for E, 0-2kcals/g of fiber) • (Cellulose and lignin completely pass through in feces)
So now we have glucose in the liver and the bloodstream. If glu is to fuel the tissues, how is it done? • “Glucose-dependent tissues” rely on glucose for fuel (not fat) • Brain, nervous system, retina, etc. • ***
Average person enough CHO stored to last ________________ hours • Since we can’t store much, need to rely on dietary CHO.