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‘ M E A T ’ , ‘ M I L K A N D M I L K - B A S E D
P R O D U C T S ( D A I R Y ) ’ A N D ‘ E X T R A S ’
XNB151 Food
and Nutrition
Rembrandt,theFlayedOx
Francisco Goya, Still Life
with Slices of Salmon, 1808 Arcimboldo, The Water
Vermeer, The Milkmaid
Velazquez, Old Woman Frying
Eggs
Meat & meat alternatives
Key nutrients obtained from meat and meat alternatives
 Macronutrients
 Protein- high biological value in meat & fish i.e. A good range of
essential amino acids
 Fats
 Omega 3 fats (some types of fish only)
 Fibre (nuts & seeds only)
Fat content of fish varies from 0.5
to 15% depending on season and
factors such as water temperature
Key nutrients obtained from meat and meat alternatives
 Minerals
 Iron
 Zinc (Oysters & crab especially rich)
 Potassium
 Phosphorous
 Iodine (fish)
 Selenium (fish & nuts)
 Fluoride (fish)
 Vitamins
 Vitamin B12 (animal products only)
 Retinol (Vitamin A) (animal products only)
 Vitamin D (Salmon, tuna, sardines, fish liver & eggs only)
 Thiamin, niacin, riboflavin (B vitamins)
Much higher bioavailability in
animals
Liver and kidney
especially rich sources
Proposed Benefits Proposed Risks
 Paleolithic diets rationale
based on evidence that
Homo sapiens evolved
on a relatively high-meat
diet
 Good source of pre-
formed arachidonic acid
 Most bioavailable source
of many minerals
 Satiating
 Saturated fat and cholesterol
 Nitrites and charring linked
with cancer
 Inconsistent link between
high meat intake & colo-rectal
cancer
 Evidence for high processed
meat intake & colo-rectal
cancer
 Displacement of vegetables
 Bovine Spongiform
Encephalopathy →
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
Meat and Health
Benefits Risks
 Mainly related to
omega 3 content (to be
discussed later in this
lecture)
 Mercury
 Tapeworms if
undercooked
 Bacterial spoilage
 Tetradoxin poisoning
Fish and Health
Benefits Risks
 Nut consumption 5+
times per week may
have reduced risk of
CVD
 Important source of
healthy fats
 Important energy &
nutrient source
 Weight gain
 Allergy (1% of persons)
Nuts and Health
http://www.nutriset.fr/en/product-range/produit-par-
produit/plumpynut-ready-to-use-therapeutic-food-
rutf.html
Milk and milk-based products
Recommended Dairy servings for Australians (AGHE)
Key nutrients obtained from Milk & Milk-Products
 Macronutrients
 Protein
 Carbohydrate
 Micronutrients
 Calcium
 Phosphorous
 Potassium
 Riboflavin
 Vitamin D (especially fortified)
Benefits Risks
 Increased bone mass
and reduced
osteoporosis
 Reduced risk of colon
cancer
 Non-cariogenic
 Nutrient rich
 If full fat versions →↑
LDL cholesterol
Milk and Health
Roles of key nutrients from meat & meat
alternatives and milk and milk-based products
Protein - Basic structure
 3-D strands composed of hundreds of amino
acids linked by peptide bonds (i.e. amino acids
join to form proteins)
 ~½ are essential or indispensable
 essential in the diet as cannot be made in the body
Proteins
Peptide bond to form
chains (protein structure
depends on order of
amino acids
ProteinCell membrane
componentSelective
transport into/
out of cells
Enzymes
Enable
chemical
reactions
Haemoglobin
Oxygen
delivery to
tissuesAlbumin
Osmotic
pressure
& water
balance
Transferrin
Iron
transport
from gut to
bone
marrow/
other tissues
Nucleoprotein
Stabilise
nucleic acid
structure
Contractile
protein
(muscle)
Muscle
contraction
& movement
Role of proteins in the body
Protein deficiency
 Deficiency - usually with inadequate energy -
malnutrition, infection, anaemia, oedema, kwashiork
or
High protein intakes
High protein diets for weight loss
Extreme approaches  very
low CHO
Moderate approaches
e.g. CSIRO Total Wellbeing Diet
Loss of fluid rather than fat
(especially in short term)
Consider lack of nutrients e.g.
fibre, vits & mins, not sustainable
Promotes moderate
consumption of nutritious
wholegrains & low GI CHO-
rich foods as well as high
protein
http://www.csiro.au/?sc_itemid={1873A95F-
6935-44F6-86A8-4D94E248F184}
High protein diets
Advantages
 Prevent muscle
wasting when energy
is restricted
 Improve satiety
 Easier compliance for
some (at least short-
term)
 As effective as low fat
for weight loss
 Improved blood
glucose control &
metabolic syndrome
Disadvantages
 High in red meat:
(opposing view to
cancer council)
 Environmental impact
(non-meat protein
sources) cost
 Unsure of long-term
effects, consider kidney
function, osteoporosis
 Increased calcium
excretion
 Long term compliance
Recommended Protein Intakes
RDI
 Men 19-70 = 0.84g/kg – ‘average’ 64g/d
 Women 19-70 = 0.75g/kg – ‘average’ 46g/d
AMDR
 Men & Women 15 to 25%
• Requirements vary for age >70y, 2nd & 3rd trimesters
of pregnancy & lactation
• Infants & children have age-specific requirements
Absorption of iron
Factors
enhancing
absorption
• Vitamin C
• Haem iron (↑s
absorption non-haem
iron)
• Cooking
Factors reducing
absorption
• Soy protein
• Tannins
(tea, coffee, wines)
• Phytates/ fibre
(wholegrains)
• Calcium/ phosphorus
(dairy)
Role of iron in the body
Iron Haemoglobin
Oxygen
transport in
blood
Myoglobin
Oxygen store
in muscle
Metalloproteins
Ferritin
Iron
storage
Transferrin Iron transport
Cytochromes
Oxidation-reduction
reactions
Iron Deficiency Symptoms
• Fatigue (inability to mobilise O2)
• Decline in cognitive function
- inability to concentrate (adult)/ intellectual
impairment (child)
• Susceptibility to infections (impaired immunity)
• Decreased pain threshold
• Impaired heat regulation (can't adapt to cold) (
thyroxine)
Iron … excess
 ≤0.5% Caucasian
population at risk of
hereditary
haemochromatosis
 Fe often interacts with
other minerals
 Fe & Ca compete for
absorption
 Fe poisoning in infants
 ‘Mummy’s lollies’ i.e. iron
tablets are little & red
Iron requirements
RDIs
 0-6 months, infants use body stores
 6 months+ 8-18mg (varies according to) age/gender
 Women 19 to 50 years 18mg
 Women aged ≥ 51 years 8mg
 Pregnant women 27mg
 Men aged ≥19 years 8mg
If iron deficiency anaemia diagnosed, iron supplements often medically
recommended
• Common side effects e.g. constipation
Calcium
Calcium is ~2% of total body weight
99.6% deposited as
calcium phosphate
crystals in bone
Strengthens bones & teeth
99.1% in intra- &
extracellular fluids
• Contraction/ relaxation
muscles
• Blood clotting
• Enzyme function
• Nervous system
messagesFood sources high
in calcium
include...
Milk, yogurt &
especially cheese
Fish with bones
Calcium absorption
 Only ~30-40% absorbed in most Australian
diets
Combinations
that facilitate
absorption
Sugars
(especially
lactose)
Protein (in
milk & cheese)
Combinations
that inhibit
absorption
Dietary fibre
Oxalates
(spinach, beetroot, eggp
lant, celery, leafy
greens, squash etc)
Increases
solubility
Decreases
solubility
• s transit time
• stimulate
bacterial growth &
bacteria bind
minerals
• Phytates bind Ca
Calcium deficiency
• Decrease in bone density  brittle weak bones (Osteoporosis)
• diet, exercise, body weight & genetics also affect development
• peak bone mass ~30 years of age
Calcium requirements
RDIs
 1 year+ 500-1300mg
(varies according to age/gender)
 Adults 1000mg/day
 Older women >50yrs 1300 mg/day
 Older men >70yrs 1300mg/day
Food preferred in place of supplementation
• supplementation may be helpful if at risk osteoporosis – consult doctor
• excess can cause GIT upsets
Vitamin D
 80 to 90% of
requirements obtained
from sunlight
 Available from a limited
range of foods
 Deficiency/insufficiency
more widespread than
previously thought
 Traditionally main role in
calcium absorption &
healthy bones
 More recent research
indicates a much wider
role in health & disease
Main Dietary Sources
Tuna, salmon, sardines, eggs, fortified milk, cheese, margarine,
RoyLichtenstein,
SinkingSun,1964
Extras
Recommended ‘extras’ servings for Australians (AGHE)
Key nutrients obtained from extras
 Macronutrients
 Fat
 Carbohydrate
 Alcohol
 Micronutrients
 Sodium
BY DEFINITION EXTRAS ARE NOT ESSENTIAL FOR
ANY OF THESE NUTRIENTS – ALL CAN BE OBTAINED
FROM OTHER SOURCES
Extras – good or bad?
vs
Some ‘extras’ may
provide health benefits
over others
INCLUDING
MODERATION
SOMETIMES
Everything in
moderation
Mostly a concern if →excess energy intake
&/or replacing foods with essential nutrients
Effects of Key Nutrients From Extras
Fats & Lipids
saturated monounsaturated polyunsaturated
point of
unsaturation
points of
unsaturation
Effect on blood cholesterol levels vary between fats
Beneficial fats
Monounsaturated FAs
Decrease total
& LDL
cholesterol &
TGs
Found in
• Monounsaturated margarine spreads
• Monounsaturated oils e.g. olive, canola &
peanut oils
• Nuts e.g. peanuts, cashews & almonds
• Seeds
• Avocado
Beneficial fats
Polyunsaturated FAs
Omega-6
Omega-3
Decrease total & LDL
cholesterol &
triglycerides
Decrease triglycerides
Increase HDL-cholesterol
Anti-platelet effects – lower risk of thrombosis
Decrease some inflammatory responses
Lower blood pressure
Found in
• Seeds & oils –
sunflower, safflower, soybean, sesa
me, grapeseed
• Polyunsat. margarine spreads &
oils
• Walnuts, brazil nuts, pinenuts
Found in
• Oils from
soybean, canola, mustard seed
• Marine sources (oily fish) e.g.
alantic
salmon, sardines, tuna, silver
perch, bass, herring, rainbow
trout, anchovy
Detrimental fats
Saturated fats Trans- fats
Found in
• Fatty meats
• Full fat dairy products
• Butter
• Coconut & palm oil
• Deep fried take-away foods
• Commercially baked products
Increases
total & LDL
cholesterol
Found in
• Small amounts in dairy
products, beef, veal, lamb &
mutton
• Baked goods
• pies & pastries
• cakes, biscuits & buns
Increases
total & LDL
cholesterol
May
Decreases
HDL
cholesterol
Functions of fat/fatty acids
 Important roles in body!
 Provide essential fatty acids & fat soluble vitamins
 protect internal organs, provide insulation
 membrane fluidity & structure
 cell division
 n-3 & n-6 affect formation of eicosanoids
 Metabolic role in regulating physiological processes (e.g.
blood clotting, immunity, vascular tone)
 Functions in palatability of food an satiety
Excess energy is stored as fat (triglycerides)
 Stored as fat
 Energy reserves for muscles
 Insulation
 thermal
 mechanical
Recommended intake of fat
 No Recommended Dietary Intake for total fat intake
 Recommendation of 20-35% of total energy with
saturated & trans fats to be no more than 10% of
energy
i.e. saturated & trans one third of total fat
Deficiency Excess
 Inadequate intake of
essential fatty acids -
linoleic, α-linolenic
 Effect on usual fat
functions
 Inadequate absorption
fat soluble vitamins
 Inadequate energy 
protein breakdown
 Weight gain, overweight/
obesity  development
chronic lifestyle related
disease
 Excess saturated/ trans
increased cardiac risk
Thrombus
Inflammatory
Cells
Smooth
Muscle Cells
Fats & Lipids
Benefits Disadvantages
 In small amounts
 Reduces risk of heart
disease
 some beverages
contain
phytochemicals
 Inappropriate/excessive use
of
 overweight
 numerous nutrient
deficiencies
 B vitamins
 general malnutrition
 digestive upsets
 raised plasma triglycerides
 foetal alcohol syndrome
 long term liver & brain disease
 accidental & violence related
hospital admissions
 risky behaviour
 social & psychological harm
Alcohol
NHMRC 2009 Alcohol Guidelines
Guideline 1:
For healthy men and women, drinking no
more than two standard drinks on any day
reduces the lifetime risk of harm from
alcohol-related disease or injury.
Guideline 2:
For healthy men and women, drinking no
more than four standard drinks on a single
occasion reduces the risk of alcohol related
injury arising from that occasion.
NHMRC 2009 Alcohol Guidelines
Guideline 3:
3A Parents and carers should be advised that
children under 15 years of age are at the
greatest risk of harm from drinking and that
for this age group, not drinking alcohol is
especially important.
3B For young people aged 15–17 years the
safest option is to delay the initiation of
drinking for as long as possible.
NHMRC 2009 Alcohol Guidelines
Guideline 4:
4A For women who are pregnant or planning
a pregnancy, not drinking is the safest
option.
4B For women who are breastfeeding, not
drinking is the safest option.
Sodium
 Kidneys regulate sodium levels
 Sweat loss only relevant in prolonged & unaccustomed heavy
exercise
 Found in many foods
 Traces  wholegrains, meat & dairy products
 Large amounts processed foods
Sodium
Maintenance of correct
volume of circulating
blood & tissue fluids
Role in electrical activity
of muscles & nerves
Control of water
movements between
muscles and tissues
Deficiency Excess
 Rare but can be
dangerous
 losses through
urine, perspiration, vomiting &
diarrhoea
 Excessive loss can lead to
muscle
cramps, nausea, vomiting
& dizziness  eventually
shock, coma & death
 main causes
 acute gastroenteritis
 severe sweating
 water intoxication (from
drinking too much water)
 Mainly thought to
elevate blood pressure &
thus  risk CVD & renal
disease
NOTE: not all
hypertension is due to
Na
Sodium requirements
 Adequate Intake
 Adults 20-40mmol/day (460-920mg/day)
 Upper level
 Adults 100 mmol/day (2300mg/day)
 Suggested Dietary Target
 Adults 70mmol/day (1600mg)
Reducing intake to avoid chronic disease
 Easiest effective methods?
  high salt foods
 choose /low salt breads/cereals/products
  processed foods
 avoid adding salt, use herbs & spices & fresh vegies for flavour
Summary of health effects of meat, dairy and extras
Meat
Dairy
Extras
Iron
Protein
Fat
Vitamin E
Retinol
(discussed in
Week 7)
Saturated
Monounsaturated
Polyunsaturated
Trans
↑d LDL
↑d HDL
↓d LDL
↓d HDL
Selective transport
into/ out of cells
Oxygen delivery/
storage/ transport
Osmotic pressure &
water balance
Iron transport/
storage
Stabilise nucleic acid
structure
Muscle contraction &
movement
Calcium
Strengthens bones &
teeth
Contraction/
relaxation muscles
Blood clotting
Enzyme function
Nervous system
messages
↓d risk heart disease
↑d risk heart disease
Sodium
↑d blood
pressure

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XNB151 Week 8 Meat, dairy and extras

  • 1. ‘ M E A T ’ , ‘ M I L K A N D M I L K - B A S E D P R O D U C T S ( D A I R Y ) ’ A N D ‘ E X T R A S ’ XNB151 Food and Nutrition Rembrandt,theFlayedOx Francisco Goya, Still Life with Slices of Salmon, 1808 Arcimboldo, The Water Vermeer, The Milkmaid Velazquez, Old Woman Frying Eggs
  • 2. Meat & meat alternatives
  • 3.
  • 4. Key nutrients obtained from meat and meat alternatives  Macronutrients  Protein- high biological value in meat & fish i.e. A good range of essential amino acids  Fats  Omega 3 fats (some types of fish only)  Fibre (nuts & seeds only) Fat content of fish varies from 0.5 to 15% depending on season and factors such as water temperature
  • 5. Key nutrients obtained from meat and meat alternatives  Minerals  Iron  Zinc (Oysters & crab especially rich)  Potassium  Phosphorous  Iodine (fish)  Selenium (fish & nuts)  Fluoride (fish)  Vitamins  Vitamin B12 (animal products only)  Retinol (Vitamin A) (animal products only)  Vitamin D (Salmon, tuna, sardines, fish liver & eggs only)  Thiamin, niacin, riboflavin (B vitamins) Much higher bioavailability in animals Liver and kidney especially rich sources
  • 6. Proposed Benefits Proposed Risks  Paleolithic diets rationale based on evidence that Homo sapiens evolved on a relatively high-meat diet  Good source of pre- formed arachidonic acid  Most bioavailable source of many minerals  Satiating  Saturated fat and cholesterol  Nitrites and charring linked with cancer  Inconsistent link between high meat intake & colo-rectal cancer  Evidence for high processed meat intake & colo-rectal cancer  Displacement of vegetables  Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy → Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Meat and Health
  • 7. Benefits Risks  Mainly related to omega 3 content (to be discussed later in this lecture)  Mercury  Tapeworms if undercooked  Bacterial spoilage  Tetradoxin poisoning Fish and Health
  • 8. Benefits Risks  Nut consumption 5+ times per week may have reduced risk of CVD  Important source of healthy fats  Important energy & nutrient source  Weight gain  Allergy (1% of persons) Nuts and Health http://www.nutriset.fr/en/product-range/produit-par- produit/plumpynut-ready-to-use-therapeutic-food- rutf.html
  • 10. Recommended Dairy servings for Australians (AGHE)
  • 11. Key nutrients obtained from Milk & Milk-Products  Macronutrients  Protein  Carbohydrate  Micronutrients  Calcium  Phosphorous  Potassium  Riboflavin  Vitamin D (especially fortified)
  • 12. Benefits Risks  Increased bone mass and reduced osteoporosis  Reduced risk of colon cancer  Non-cariogenic  Nutrient rich  If full fat versions →↑ LDL cholesterol Milk and Health
  • 13. Roles of key nutrients from meat & meat alternatives and milk and milk-based products
  • 14. Protein - Basic structure  3-D strands composed of hundreds of amino acids linked by peptide bonds (i.e. amino acids join to form proteins)  ~½ are essential or indispensable  essential in the diet as cannot be made in the body Proteins Peptide bond to form chains (protein structure depends on order of amino acids
  • 15. ProteinCell membrane componentSelective transport into/ out of cells Enzymes Enable chemical reactions Haemoglobin Oxygen delivery to tissuesAlbumin Osmotic pressure & water balance Transferrin Iron transport from gut to bone marrow/ other tissues Nucleoprotein Stabilise nucleic acid structure Contractile protein (muscle) Muscle contraction & movement Role of proteins in the body
  • 16. Protein deficiency  Deficiency - usually with inadequate energy - malnutrition, infection, anaemia, oedema, kwashiork or
  • 17. High protein intakes High protein diets for weight loss Extreme approaches  very low CHO Moderate approaches e.g. CSIRO Total Wellbeing Diet Loss of fluid rather than fat (especially in short term) Consider lack of nutrients e.g. fibre, vits & mins, not sustainable Promotes moderate consumption of nutritious wholegrains & low GI CHO- rich foods as well as high protein http://www.csiro.au/?sc_itemid={1873A95F- 6935-44F6-86A8-4D94E248F184}
  • 18. High protein diets Advantages  Prevent muscle wasting when energy is restricted  Improve satiety  Easier compliance for some (at least short- term)  As effective as low fat for weight loss  Improved blood glucose control & metabolic syndrome Disadvantages  High in red meat: (opposing view to cancer council)  Environmental impact (non-meat protein sources) cost  Unsure of long-term effects, consider kidney function, osteoporosis  Increased calcium excretion  Long term compliance
  • 19. Recommended Protein Intakes RDI  Men 19-70 = 0.84g/kg – ‘average’ 64g/d  Women 19-70 = 0.75g/kg – ‘average’ 46g/d AMDR  Men & Women 15 to 25% • Requirements vary for age >70y, 2nd & 3rd trimesters of pregnancy & lactation • Infants & children have age-specific requirements
  • 20. Absorption of iron Factors enhancing absorption • Vitamin C • Haem iron (↑s absorption non-haem iron) • Cooking Factors reducing absorption • Soy protein • Tannins (tea, coffee, wines) • Phytates/ fibre (wholegrains) • Calcium/ phosphorus (dairy)
  • 21. Role of iron in the body Iron Haemoglobin Oxygen transport in blood Myoglobin Oxygen store in muscle Metalloproteins Ferritin Iron storage Transferrin Iron transport Cytochromes Oxidation-reduction reactions
  • 22. Iron Deficiency Symptoms • Fatigue (inability to mobilise O2) • Decline in cognitive function - inability to concentrate (adult)/ intellectual impairment (child) • Susceptibility to infections (impaired immunity) • Decreased pain threshold • Impaired heat regulation (can't adapt to cold) ( thyroxine)
  • 23. Iron … excess  ≤0.5% Caucasian population at risk of hereditary haemochromatosis  Fe often interacts with other minerals  Fe & Ca compete for absorption  Fe poisoning in infants  ‘Mummy’s lollies’ i.e. iron tablets are little & red
  • 24. Iron requirements RDIs  0-6 months, infants use body stores  6 months+ 8-18mg (varies according to) age/gender  Women 19 to 50 years 18mg  Women aged ≥ 51 years 8mg  Pregnant women 27mg  Men aged ≥19 years 8mg If iron deficiency anaemia diagnosed, iron supplements often medically recommended • Common side effects e.g. constipation
  • 25. Calcium Calcium is ~2% of total body weight 99.6% deposited as calcium phosphate crystals in bone Strengthens bones & teeth 99.1% in intra- & extracellular fluids • Contraction/ relaxation muscles • Blood clotting • Enzyme function • Nervous system messagesFood sources high in calcium include... Milk, yogurt & especially cheese Fish with bones
  • 26. Calcium absorption  Only ~30-40% absorbed in most Australian diets Combinations that facilitate absorption Sugars (especially lactose) Protein (in milk & cheese) Combinations that inhibit absorption Dietary fibre Oxalates (spinach, beetroot, eggp lant, celery, leafy greens, squash etc) Increases solubility Decreases solubility • s transit time • stimulate bacterial growth & bacteria bind minerals • Phytates bind Ca
  • 27. Calcium deficiency • Decrease in bone density  brittle weak bones (Osteoporosis) • diet, exercise, body weight & genetics also affect development • peak bone mass ~30 years of age
  • 28. Calcium requirements RDIs  1 year+ 500-1300mg (varies according to age/gender)  Adults 1000mg/day  Older women >50yrs 1300 mg/day  Older men >70yrs 1300mg/day Food preferred in place of supplementation • supplementation may be helpful if at risk osteoporosis – consult doctor • excess can cause GIT upsets
  • 29. Vitamin D  80 to 90% of requirements obtained from sunlight  Available from a limited range of foods  Deficiency/insufficiency more widespread than previously thought  Traditionally main role in calcium absorption & healthy bones  More recent research indicates a much wider role in health & disease Main Dietary Sources Tuna, salmon, sardines, eggs, fortified milk, cheese, margarine, RoyLichtenstein, SinkingSun,1964
  • 31. Recommended ‘extras’ servings for Australians (AGHE)
  • 32. Key nutrients obtained from extras  Macronutrients  Fat  Carbohydrate  Alcohol  Micronutrients  Sodium BY DEFINITION EXTRAS ARE NOT ESSENTIAL FOR ANY OF THESE NUTRIENTS – ALL CAN BE OBTAINED FROM OTHER SOURCES
  • 33. Extras – good or bad? vs Some ‘extras’ may provide health benefits over others INCLUDING MODERATION SOMETIMES Everything in moderation Mostly a concern if →excess energy intake &/or replacing foods with essential nutrients
  • 34. Effects of Key Nutrients From Extras
  • 35. Fats & Lipids saturated monounsaturated polyunsaturated point of unsaturation points of unsaturation Effect on blood cholesterol levels vary between fats
  • 36.
  • 37. Beneficial fats Monounsaturated FAs Decrease total & LDL cholesterol & TGs Found in • Monounsaturated margarine spreads • Monounsaturated oils e.g. olive, canola & peanut oils • Nuts e.g. peanuts, cashews & almonds • Seeds • Avocado
  • 38. Beneficial fats Polyunsaturated FAs Omega-6 Omega-3 Decrease total & LDL cholesterol & triglycerides Decrease triglycerides Increase HDL-cholesterol Anti-platelet effects – lower risk of thrombosis Decrease some inflammatory responses Lower blood pressure Found in • Seeds & oils – sunflower, safflower, soybean, sesa me, grapeseed • Polyunsat. margarine spreads & oils • Walnuts, brazil nuts, pinenuts Found in • Oils from soybean, canola, mustard seed • Marine sources (oily fish) e.g. alantic salmon, sardines, tuna, silver perch, bass, herring, rainbow trout, anchovy
  • 39. Detrimental fats Saturated fats Trans- fats Found in • Fatty meats • Full fat dairy products • Butter • Coconut & palm oil • Deep fried take-away foods • Commercially baked products Increases total & LDL cholesterol Found in • Small amounts in dairy products, beef, veal, lamb & mutton • Baked goods • pies & pastries • cakes, biscuits & buns Increases total & LDL cholesterol May Decreases HDL cholesterol
  • 40. Functions of fat/fatty acids  Important roles in body!  Provide essential fatty acids & fat soluble vitamins  protect internal organs, provide insulation  membrane fluidity & structure  cell division  n-3 & n-6 affect formation of eicosanoids  Metabolic role in regulating physiological processes (e.g. blood clotting, immunity, vascular tone)  Functions in palatability of food an satiety
  • 41. Excess energy is stored as fat (triglycerides)  Stored as fat  Energy reserves for muscles  Insulation  thermal  mechanical
  • 42. Recommended intake of fat  No Recommended Dietary Intake for total fat intake  Recommendation of 20-35% of total energy with saturated & trans fats to be no more than 10% of energy i.e. saturated & trans one third of total fat
  • 43. Deficiency Excess  Inadequate intake of essential fatty acids - linoleic, α-linolenic  Effect on usual fat functions  Inadequate absorption fat soluble vitamins  Inadequate energy  protein breakdown  Weight gain, overweight/ obesity  development chronic lifestyle related disease  Excess saturated/ trans increased cardiac risk Thrombus Inflammatory Cells Smooth Muscle Cells Fats & Lipids
  • 44. Benefits Disadvantages  In small amounts  Reduces risk of heart disease  some beverages contain phytochemicals  Inappropriate/excessive use of  overweight  numerous nutrient deficiencies  B vitamins  general malnutrition  digestive upsets  raised plasma triglycerides  foetal alcohol syndrome  long term liver & brain disease  accidental & violence related hospital admissions  risky behaviour  social & psychological harm Alcohol
  • 45. NHMRC 2009 Alcohol Guidelines Guideline 1: For healthy men and women, drinking no more than two standard drinks on any day reduces the lifetime risk of harm from alcohol-related disease or injury. Guideline 2: For healthy men and women, drinking no more than four standard drinks on a single occasion reduces the risk of alcohol related injury arising from that occasion.
  • 46. NHMRC 2009 Alcohol Guidelines Guideline 3: 3A Parents and carers should be advised that children under 15 years of age are at the greatest risk of harm from drinking and that for this age group, not drinking alcohol is especially important. 3B For young people aged 15–17 years the safest option is to delay the initiation of drinking for as long as possible.
  • 47. NHMRC 2009 Alcohol Guidelines Guideline 4: 4A For women who are pregnant or planning a pregnancy, not drinking is the safest option. 4B For women who are breastfeeding, not drinking is the safest option.
  • 48. Sodium  Kidneys regulate sodium levels  Sweat loss only relevant in prolonged & unaccustomed heavy exercise  Found in many foods  Traces  wholegrains, meat & dairy products  Large amounts processed foods Sodium Maintenance of correct volume of circulating blood & tissue fluids Role in electrical activity of muscles & nerves Control of water movements between muscles and tissues
  • 49. Deficiency Excess  Rare but can be dangerous  losses through urine, perspiration, vomiting & diarrhoea  Excessive loss can lead to muscle cramps, nausea, vomiting & dizziness  eventually shock, coma & death  main causes  acute gastroenteritis  severe sweating  water intoxication (from drinking too much water)  Mainly thought to elevate blood pressure & thus  risk CVD & renal disease NOTE: not all hypertension is due to Na
  • 50. Sodium requirements  Adequate Intake  Adults 20-40mmol/day (460-920mg/day)  Upper level  Adults 100 mmol/day (2300mg/day)  Suggested Dietary Target  Adults 70mmol/day (1600mg)
  • 51. Reducing intake to avoid chronic disease  Easiest effective methods?   high salt foods  choose /low salt breads/cereals/products   processed foods  avoid adding salt, use herbs & spices & fresh vegies for flavour
  • 52. Summary of health effects of meat, dairy and extras Meat Dairy Extras Iron Protein Fat Vitamin E Retinol (discussed in Week 7) Saturated Monounsaturated Polyunsaturated Trans ↑d LDL ↑d HDL ↓d LDL ↓d HDL Selective transport into/ out of cells Oxygen delivery/ storage/ transport Osmotic pressure & water balance Iron transport/ storage Stabilise nucleic acid structure Muscle contraction & movement Calcium Strengthens bones & teeth Contraction/ relaxation muscles Blood clotting Enzyme function Nervous system messages ↓d risk heart disease ↑d risk heart disease Sodium ↑d blood pressure