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NUTRITIONAL STANDARDS NFSC 100. DRI Food Labels Dietary Guidelines My Pyramid. Nutrition Standards: A diet should be balanced and adequate. For more than 50 years, the RDA, Recommended Dietary Allowances, was the nutritional standard Focus:
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NUTRITIONAL STANDARDSNFSC 100 DRI Food Labels Dietary Guidelines My Pyramid
Nutrition Standards:A diet should be balanced and adequate • For more than 50 years, the RDA, Recommended Dietary Allowances, was the nutritional standard • Focus: • Now is being replaced by the DRIs, Dietary Reference Intakes.
Difference Between Old RDA and New DRI: • DRIs use more than one set of values, • Focus on ________________________, not just preventing deficiency, and • Recognize a need, in this age of supplementation, for a _______________ ___________________________________
DRI: Dietary Reference Intakes4 values: • EAR Estimated Average Requirement • (population averages – used for research and public policy setting) • RDA: Recommended Dietary Allowances • safe and adequate intakes for most healthy people • AI : Adequate intakes • (nutrient goals for individuals – set when there’s not enough scientific evidence to set an RDA), and • UL: Tolerable Upper Intake Levels
A Note about the RDA/DRI • Margin for safety -- not a minimum requirement • Meant to be met with food (big rocks)
NUTRITIONAL STANDARDS DRI Food Labels Dietary Guidelines My Pyramid
Food Labels • Ingredients List • descending order by weight • Beverages w/juice must declare %juice
Weight: 1 oz. = 28.4g (or about 30g) 130 mg
%DV = % Daily Value • Based on a 2000 kcal diet and the following reference values: • Total fat: less than 65g • Sat’d fat: less than 20g • Cholesterol: less than 300mg • Sodium: less than 2400mg • Total CHO: 300g • Protein: 25g Food Label
Legal Terms for Food Labels • Low fat: 3 g fat per serving. • Low saturated fat: 1 g sat’d fat per serving. • Low cholesterol: 20 mg cholesterol per serving. • Low sodium: 140 mg per serving. • High fiber: 5 g or more fiber per serving
Good source: One serving provides at least 10% DV for a particular nutrient. • High in/Excellent Source: 20%+ DV for a particular nutrient • Reduced/Less: 25% less fat or fewer kcals than the regular (reference) food.
Calculating % Kcals From Macronutrients • 1. Convert grams to kcals. • Prot. kcals + CHO kcals + fat kcals = TOTAL KCALS … always label your units!
2. Find % kcals from each macronutrient • Then you can compare these numbers to the standards.
Using the same example, calculate %kcals from saturated fat and sugar • Sat’d fat: • Sugar:
Example 2:Calculate 1. Total kcals 2. % kcals from each macronutrient • Total fat: 3g • Saturated fat: 1g • Total Carbohydrate: 32g • Protein: 3g
“Supplement Facts” Label • Manufacturers are not required to provide evidence of safety/efficacy • Burden of proof of safety and efficacy of a dietary supplement is on the FDA (Food and Drug Administration)
Vitamin Mineral Herb or botanical Amino acid Metabolite Constituent Extract Or any combination of the above Dietary Supplement
Buyer-beware Market • Health/nutrition claims can legally be made as long as this appears on the label: • “This statement has not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease”
Progress? • Ten-year plan (HP2010) to develop a science-based regulatory program for dietary supplements. • Legally, marketers of supplements “must have above board scientific evidence to support any health claims.” • FDA still has the burden of proof. • The industry is still largely unregulated.
Issue of “doping” • IOC, NCAA, and other organizations have strict doping regulations • Essential nutrients are legal • Several supplements are prohibited This will be covered in our “ergogenic aids” lecture, but is briefly discussed in h. 1 of your text. • Note that several banned substances are available in over-the-counter-supplements, and may not be declared on the label. Athletes are subject to disqualification from an event if doping is detected.
FDA List of Potentially Hazardous Supplements:(Be able to recognize these as potentially hazardous) • Chaparral – traditional American Indian medicine • Liver disease, possibly irreversible • Comfrey • Obstruction of blood flow to liver, possibly leading to death • Slimming, Dieter’s Tea • N/D/V/stomach cramps, chronic constipation, fainting, possible death
Banned 12/31/03 • Ephedra, ephedrine, ma huang, Chinese ephedra, epitonin • High bp, irregular heartbeat, nerve damage, injury, insomnia, tremors, headaches to seizures, heart attack, stroke, death • Germander • Liver disease, possibly leading to death • Lobelia (Indian Tobacco) • Breathing problems at low doses to sweating/rapid heartbeat, low blood pressure, possible coma/death at higher dosages
Magnolia Stephania • Kidney disease, possibly leading to kidney failure and death • Willowbark – marketed as an aspirin free product, although it contains an ingredient which converts to the same active ingredient in aspirin • Rye syndrome (potentially fatal disease associated w/children who take aspirin while having chicken pox or flu symptoms), allergic reactions in adults • Wormwood • Neurological symptoms: numbness in legs and arms, loss of intellect, delirium, paralysis, and death.
For more info: http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/1998/dietchrt.html • Science-based book on Herbs: “The Honest Herbal,” by Varro Tyler, Ph.D., Sc.D.,