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Mechanical digestion
The breaking down of big food parts into smaller ones, involving muscles and nerves. Chewing(mastication)
Chemical digestion
The breaking down of big food parts into smaller ones, involving acid, enzymes, and hormones. Saliva and amylase(breaks down carbs).
What is an Enzyme?
Protein that catalyze metabolic reactions, and are necessary for most biochemical reactions to occur.
Examples of enzymes
amylase:carbohydrates
protease:proteins
lipase: Lipids/Fats
What is a Hormone?
Chemicals produced by cells, and secreted, then affect the behavior of cells at distal sites in the body.
Examples of hormones and purpose?
Secretin: released from duodenal cells and sends signals to the pancreas to secrete digestive enzymes to the stomach to produce pepsin, a protease enzyme, and to the liver to produce bile.
Cholecystokinin: released form duodenal cells and sends signals to the pancreas to secrete digestive enzymes to the gallbladder to release bile.
Peristalsis
a muscular wave action that occurs throughout the intestinal tract.
Stomach
muscular organ and storage reservoir. It mechanically digests food by mixing and churning. Chemically digests food with acid and some enzymes(pepsin). The food then becomes chyme
Small Intestine Order
Duodenum
Jejunum
Ileum
The 3 accessory Organs and functions
Liver: makes bile
Gallbladder: stores bile
Pancreas: Makes enzymes, and makes sodium bicarbonate to neutralize stomach acid
Function of Bile
Emulsifier:brings the fat to the enzymes
Passive(simple) Diffusion(transport)
products pass freely across membrane, no energy
Facilitated Diffusion(transport)
water soluble vitamins diffuse across membrane using a specific proteins, needs a protein but no energy
Active Transport
glucose and amino acids move across membrane against a concentration gradient using a specific protein, and energy.
Duodenum absorbs what?
many nutrients
Jejunum absorbs what?
many nutrients
Ileum absorbs what?
only selected nutrients
Colon absorbs what?
water
Blood vessels transport what?
water soluble nutrients
Lymphatic system transport what?
fat soluble nutrients
Catabolic Reaction
breaking down, involves hydrolysis reactions. degrading and destructive in nature
Anabolic reactions
Building up, involves condensation reactions. synthesizing or constructive in nature.
Homeostasis
balance of catabolic and anabolic reactions to keep a stable internal environment of equilibrium.
What action does the enzyme lipase have on triglycerides?
Catabolic
What action does bile have on triglycerides?
neither
What action does the hormone secretin have on the liver?
anabolic
What the kidney excrets
water and water soluble waste
What the skin excrets
water and water soluble waste
What the lung excrets
carbon dioxide and water
What the colon excrets
Water is removed and waste(bacteria, fiber, etc.) is compacted
Protein Denaturation
Causes the protein to change shape or conformation. The protein and the amino acids are still intact.
What can cause protein denaturation?
heat, bases, acids, or metals
Protein Digestion
the protein strand is broken ans the amino acids are released. Amino acids are absorbed, transported to cells and then used to build proteins.
Protein synthesis
after denaturation and digestion the amino acids then proteins are made according to the DNA. Process of converting to DNA to RNA then protein.
Fibrous protein
uniform in structure, either helix or sheet formation
Globular protein
have variation in structure, part helix, part sheet or completely random
8 protein functions
1. Growth and tissue maintenance
2. Enzymes
3. Antibodies
4.Fluid and electrolyte balance
5.Acid-base balance
6. Energy
7. Protein hormones (insulin, glucagon, secretin and cholecystokinin)
The Dietary Reference Intake (DRI) for fiber for an adult is...
0.8gm/kg
The Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Range (AMDR) for protein is...
10-35%
Kwashiorkor
Protein deficiency. An individual has peripheral edema and may not look undernourished.
Marasmus
Protein-Energy deficiency. This individual looks undernourished.
Protein Excess and risks
common in athletes and fad dieters common risks include:
Dehydration
liver and spleen enlargement
Accelerated kidney aging
metabolic acidosis
Vitamin B6 deficiency, Ca and
ZN loss
Heart disease and cancer
Photosynthesis
process by which plants make carbs structure
categories of fiber
soluble & insoluble
soluble fiber
spongey, softens in water (fruits, veggies, legumes and oats)
insoluble fiber/semi-soluble
doesn't soften or attract water (whole grain foods, celery, apple peel, CELLULOSE)
high fiber intake
over 2 g/100 caps
fiber food sources
grains, cereals, legumes, fruits and veggies
benefits of fiber in the diet
bulk (high volume food w/o cals), stool softener (food smooth along GI tract & relieves constipation), decreases transit time (more things through quicker) & helps heart health
Benefits-action of fiber
increases gastric emptying time
Negative effects of too much fiber
gas & bloating, large & frequent bowel movements, binds pos. charged minerals, binds beta-carotene (carrots), decreases caloric value, cause GI tract blockage
What is glucose used for?
energy & glycogen storage; brain function; muscle function; fat synthesis
Glycogen
Storage form of glucose; stored in the liver; used for blood sugar regulation
How does the body regulate blood sugar?
by hormones produced in pancreas: insulin & glucagon
Insulin
DECREASES blood sugar levels
Glucagon
INCREASES blood sugar levels
lactose intolerance
inability to digest lactose (milk sugar); symptoms: gas, bloating, cramps, diarrhea
allergy
immune response and involves antigens & antibodies
antibody
protein structure produced by immune cells that inactivate antigens (allergens)
Antigen
foreign protein substance that elicit immune reaction
Hypoglycemia
low blood sugar
reactive hypoglycemia
blood sugar levels drop after eating sugar
Hyperinsulinemia
the presence of excess insulin in the blood
spontaneous hypoglycemia
glycogen are depleted the ability to maintain blood sugar is diminished (btwen meals or when food has not been consumed)
drug induced hypoglycemia
low blood sugar from drug reaction
diabetes
A chronic disease characterized by hyperglycemia
Type 1 diabetes
less common, juvenile onset, more difficult to control, insulin dependent
type 2 diabetes
most common, adult onset, controlled with lifestyle changes, caused by insulin resistance
Atherosclerosis
hardening of the arteries
DASH diet
dietary approach to stop hypertension
How to reduce blood pressure
DASH diet, exercise, healthy body weight
Blood Lipids
serum cholesterol and serum triglycerides
Serum Triglycerides
elevated levels associated w heart disease, high levels thicken blood causing hypertriglyceridemia, Very Low Density Lipoproteins (VLDL)
serum cholesterol
Low Density Lipoproteins (LDL) & High Density Lipoproteins (HDL); HDLs return cholesterol to liver for synthesis of bile, hormones & vitamins; LDLs deliver cholesterol to tissue
blood cholesterol levels
total: <200 mg
LDL: <100 mg
HDL: <40 (low) >60 (high)
metabolic syndrome
if 3 + of these factors:
1.) fasting blood triglycerides lvl
2.) HDL lvl
3.) blood pressure high
4.) fasting glucose high
5.) waist circumference
Dietary Fat & Lipoproteins
SFA: increase LDL
PUFA: decrease LDL & HDL
MUFA: decrease LDL
Oxidation of Fat
double bonds of PUFAs are targets for oxidation
double bond breaks w oxidation generating lipid fragments that are sticky
sticky fragments contribute to atherosclerosis
Antioxidants
prevent oxidation reactions, react w oxygen directly and prevent heart disease
antioxidant vitamins
vitamin E, beta-carotene, and vitamin C
antioxidant minerals
zinc, copper & iron
hydrogenation of fats
trans fatty acid levels are high; double bonds from PUFAs & MUFAs removed by hydrogenation
trans fatty acids
increase LDL & decrease HDL cholesterol & increasing triglycerides
omega-3 fatty acids
good for you, reduces inflammation (salmon, herring, mackerel, tuna & whitefish)
Homocysteine
damages arteries
Lipids in Cancer
• Cancer is the 2nd leading cause of death in Americans.
• It is characterized by uncontrolled cell growth.
• It occurs through a process of initiation, promotion, and progression.
Carcinogen
initiation -> promotion -> progression
metastasis
cells split into blood stream and travel to another tissue and cancer spreads (stage 4)