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Published byMalcolm Shelton Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 5 Lesson 2 Carbohydrates, proteins and Fats
Carbohydrates – Starches and sugars found in foods Carbohydrates are the preferred source of energy, providing 4 calories per gram Depending on the chemical makeup, carbohydrates are classified into 2 types Simple or complex
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Carbohydrates Health experts recommend that 55 to 65% of your daily calories come from carbohydrates, mainly complex carbohydrates
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Simple Carbohydrates Sugars are present naturally in fruits, some vegetables, and milk Fructose – Fruits Lactose – Milk Maltose – grain Sucrose – Table sugar
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Complex Carbohydrates
Starches – found in great supply in rice and other grains, seed nuts, legumes (dried peas and beans) Tubers – (potatoes, cassava, yams, taro) Starches are called complex carbohydrates because they are chemically more complex than simple carbohydrates During digestion, starches break down into sugar
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The Role of Carbohydrates
Before body can use carbohydrates it must be broken down into glucose Glucose – a simple sugar and IS THE BODY’S CHIEF FUEL Glucose not used right away is stored in the liver and muscles as a starch like substance Called GLYCOGEN
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The Role of Carbohydrates
Later when glucose is needed the glycogen is converted back to glucose When people consume more carbohydrates than their body need for energy or can store as glycogen, this excess is stored as adipose tissue or fat
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Fiber Found in the tough, stringy part of vegetables, fruits, and grains, fiber is a special for of complex carbohydrate It cannot be digested or used for energy it helps move waste through your digestive system
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Fiber Helps reduce some types of cancer
Helps reduce constipation, appendicitis Helps control diabetes and some types of fiber seem to help lower blood cholesterol Increase fiber in body by eating an abundance of fruits and vegetables Bran cereal, wheat breads, pasta, oatmeal, brown rice, popcorn Need 25 grams of fiber per day Special form of Complex carbohydrates
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Proteins
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Proteins Nutrients that help build and maintain body tissues
Muscle, bone, skin, connective tissue, teeth, blood and vital organs all contain protein Calories provide 4 calories per gram Excess protein is converted to fat and stored for storage
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Proteins Proteins are made of building blocks called AMINO ACIDS
Your body can make all but 9 of the 20 amino acids These 9 are called ESSENTIAL AMINO ACIDS because they must come form food you eat Proteins – 2 categories – Complete and Incomplete
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Complete Proteins Complete proteins – Contain all essential amino acids that come from food you eat that the body needs and in the proper amounts These include animal products, such as fish, meat, poultry, eggs, milk, cheese, yogurt, and many soybean products
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Incomplete Proteins Foods that lack some of the essential amino acids
Such food sources come from plants: Legumes, nuts, whole grains, and seeds Eating various incomplete protein sources – Legumes with grains give the equivalent of a complete protein P.104
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The Role of Proteins During life new proteins form constantly to replace damage or worn out body cells Proteins in enzymes, hormones and antibodies also help regulate many body processes
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Fats
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Fats Fats are a type of lipid – a fatty substance that does not dissolve in water Fats are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms Fats are made of fatty acids Fats classified as SATURATED OR UNSATURATED
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Fats Gram for gram, fats deliver more than twice the energy of either carbohydrates or proteins
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Saturated Fats Fatty acids are called saturated when the fatty acid hold all the hydrogen atoms it can Saturated Fats: Stay solid or semi solid at room temperature Animal fats and tropical oils Palm oils Palm kernel oil Coconut oil Fats in beef, pork, egg yolks, and dairy foods
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Unsaturated Fats When fatty acid is missing one or ore pairs of hydrogen atoms Most vegetable fats are unsaturated: Liquid at room temperature Olive oil, canola soybean, corn, cotton seed oils are unsaturated *Hydrogenated foods – adding missing hydrogen atoms to food - PEANUT BUTTER, MARGARINE
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The Role of Fat Fats carry vitamins A,D,E,K into your blood stream and serve as sources of linoeic acid – Essential fatty acid not made in the body but which is essential for growth and healthy skin Body fat surrounds and protects vital organs Protects body against excessive heat or cold
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The Role of Fat Body needs only a moderate amount of dietary fat each day Average teenage girl: 2,200 calories per day and 66 grams of fat per day Average teenage boy: 2,800 calories per day and 84 grams of fat per day Too much fat linked to obesity, heart disease, diabetes Fat intake no more than 30% daily
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Cholesterol Fatlike substance produced in the liver of all animals and therefore, found only in foods of animal origins – meats, poultry, fish, eggs and dairy products Cholesterol is instrumental in production of sex hormones, vitamin D and protective sheaths around nerve fibers
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