Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBenedict Summers Modified over 9 years ago
1
Lecture 7a- 20 October 2014 Vitamins in metabolism and regulation Most of this lecture taken from Chapters 7,10,11 of Rolfes et al(Understanding Normal and Clinical Nutrition (Nutrition 2104/2105 text)
2
Outline of lectures 7a,b Vitamins Definition of vitamins Overview Bioavailability Precursors Organic nature Solubility Water soluble vitamins Fat soluble vitamins Toxicity Class exercise
3
Outline of lectures 7a,b Water Soluble vitamins B vitamins and C Found in what foods
4
Outline of lectures 7a,b B class-roles in metabolism and regulation of metabolism Thiamine Riboflavin Niacin Biotin Pantothenic acid B 6 folate B 12 Class exercise
5
Outline of lectures 7a,b Fat soluble vitamins Found in what foods Fat soluble vitamins class-roles in metabolism and regulation of metabolism A D E K Class exercise
6
More detailed comments
7
More Detailed Comments Vitamins Definition of vitamins-organic essential nutrients required in tiny amounts to perform specific functions that promote growth, reproduction and maintenance of health and life. -vita = life -amine = containing nitrogen (first vitamins discovered contained nitrogen)
8
Vitamins Overview -two things attest to power of vitamins absence- eg vitamin A –blindness vitamin B 3 -niacin-dementia presence-eg vitamin C prevents scurvy vitamin E-appears to protect against oxidation component of atherosclerosis
9
Vitamins Overview -differ from carbohydrates, lipids and proteins -single units -do not yield energy when broken down- they assist in energy yielding pathways of carbohydrate, lipid and protein metabolism -daily dietary intake requirements are in the microgram or milligram range as opposed to gram range for energy yielding nutrients
10
Vitamins Bioavailability -two factors- -amount of vitamin in food -amount absorbed and utilised -efficiency of digestion and time of transit through GI tract -previous nutrient intake and nutrition status -other foods consumed at the same time -method of food preparation-raw, cooked or processed -source of nutrient-synthetic, fortified or naturally occurring
11
Vitamins Precursors -also called provitamins -provitamins-are metabolised to active form -in measuring a person’s vitamin intake it is important to count the active forms and the potential of the precursors to be converted to active forms
12
Vitamins Organic nature -this means they can be broken down -eg-excessive heating destroys thiamin -ultraviolet radiation-destroys riboflavin -oxygen- destroys vitamin C -food processing-easily destroys pantothenic acid -B 12 -easily destroyed my microwave cooking -table 10-1
13
In Summary, p. 326
14
Vitamins Solubility -affects absorption, transport, storage, and excretion by body
15
Vitamins Solubility Water soluble vitamins -found in water portions of foods and transported directly by blood -no carriers are required for blood transport -stored in water portion of cells -easy to excrete through kidney
16
Vitamins Solubility Fat soluble vitamins -found in fat portions of foods and transported first by lymph and then by blood -carriers are required for blood transport -stored in body fat stores -easier to keep stored in fat stores rather than excrete-issue of toxicity
17
Vitamins Toxicity -water soluble-not likely to reach toxic levels when consumed by supplements -fat soluble-likely to reach toxic levels when consumed by supplements
18
Class exercise a) are all vitamin pre-cursors equally converted to active form? Significance? b) why the difference in likelihood of toxicity between fat and water soluble vitamins? c) how do you think fat soluble vitamins might be transported in the blood?
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.