Chapter 1 Nutrition for Healthy Living
Lifestyle
A person's usual way of living that includes dietary practices, physical activity, uses of substances, and other typical patterns of behavior.
Risk Factor
A personal characteristic that increases your chances of developing a chronic disease.
Dietary Supplement
A product that contains a vitamin, mineral herb, an amino acid, or a dietary substance that supplements the diet
Pellagra
A vitamin deficiency disease from people whose diets contain little or no niacin (vitamin b))
Megadose
An amount of a vitamin or mineral that is at least 10 times the recommended amount of the nutrient.
Six classes of nutrients
Carbs, fats and other lipids, proteins, vitamins, minerals and water
Macronutrients
Carbs, fats, and proteins
Sustainable agriculture
Farming methods that do not deplete natural resources or harm the environment while meeting the demand for food
Genetic modification
Involve scientific methods that alter an animal or plant's hereditary material
Is there such thing as a good or bad food
No food deserves the label of bad or junk because all food have nutritional value- a food can only be bad if it contains toxic substances or is contaminated with bacteria.
Primary cause of preventable cancer deaths
Smoking
Nonnutrient
Substances that are not nutrients but have health benefits
Nutrients
The life-sustaining substances in food
Nutrition
The scientific study of nutrients, chemicals necessary for proper body functioning and how the body uses them.
Cell
The smallest living functional unit in an organism
Metabolism
The total of all chemical processes that occur in living cells, including chemical reactions involved in generating energy, making proteins and eliminating waste
Calorie
The unit that describes the energy content of food
Micronutrients
Vitamins and Minerals
What is the most essential Nutrient?
Water
Deficiency Disease
When a nutrient is missing from the diet
Nutrient dense
contains more vitamins and minerals in relation to its unhealthy fat/sugar/alcohol contents.
Dietary moderation
involves obtaining enough nutrients from food to meet one's needs while avoiding excessive amounts and balancing calorie intake with calorie expenditure, primary by physical activity
Antioxidant
protects cells and their components from being damaged or destroyed by exposure to certain harmful environmental and internal factors.
Physiological dose
the amount that is within the range of safe intake and enables the body to function optimally
Risk factors that contribute to health
Age, environmental conditions, psychological factors, access to health care, lifestyle practices and genetic background.
Empty calorie
Contributes a large portion of its energy from unhealthy solid fat, sugar, and/or alcohol
Food insecurity
Describes individuals or families who are concerned about running out of food or not having enough money to buy more food
Energy density
Describes the energy value of a food in relation to the food's weight
Overnutrition
Long-term excess of energy or nutrient intake (obesity)
Essential Nutrient
Must be supplied by food because the body does not synthesize the nutrient or make enough to meet its needs.
Biotechnology
involves the use of living things to manufacture products
Chemistry
the study of the composition and characteristics of matter and changes that can occur in it
Chronic diseases
usually take many years to develop and have complex causes