Fiber (Chapter 4)
FYI CARD 4 Characteristics of Fiber that provide physiologic benefits.
1. Solubility in water (or not) 2. Water-Holding Capacity & Viscosity 3. Adsorption or binding ability 4. Degradeability/Fermentability
A dietary & functional fiber consisting of tree & shrub exudates (aka sap from plants/trees); found in oatmeal, barley, legumes. (video posted in group)
Gums (hydrocolloids) *GI: highly fermentable by GI bacteria *be able to write this definition/discuss
A dietary fiber located in plant CELL WALLS found in bran, whole grains, nuts, legumes, some vegetables & fruits (*wide combination).
Hemicellulose *GI: soluble/insoluble & fermentable/not fermentable (b/c of backbone & side chain variety) *be able to write this definition/discuss
What are some examples of water soluble fibers? See p117 pic.
Hemicelluloses, pectins, gums, beta-glucans, fructans (inulin, fructooligosaccharides), psyllium, and some resistant starches. Ex: legumes, oats, barley, some fruits (berries, bannanas, apples, pears), and some veg (carrots, broccoli, artichokes, onion)
A dietary & functional fiber which is water soluble & highly fermentable; found in cereal brans, esp oat & barley cereals.
Beta-Glucans
A dietary & functional fiber located in plant CELL WALLS found in bran, legumes, nuts, peas, root veggies, cabbage family, outer covering of seeds, apples.
Cellulose *GI: degraded inconsistently by GI bacteria *be able to write this definition/discuss
A type of functional fiber; insoluble; similar to cellulose, found in cell walls and outside shell of crabs, shrimp, lobster.
Chitin (Dr. R: popular a while back in pill form & was used to lower cholesterol)
Name 3 fructans.
Inulin Oligofructose Fructooligosaccharides
A dietary fiber known for prebiotic attribute and found in chicory, asparagus, onions, garlic, artichokes, tomatoes, and bananas.
Fructan
A dietary & functional fiber in STEMS, SEEDS, BRAN LAYER of plants; found in wheat, mature root veggies, fruits with edible seeds.
Lignin (structural support) *GI: poorly fermented by GI bacteria *be able to write this definition/discuss
A dietary & functional fiber in the CELL WALL & MIDDLE LAMELLA that is water soluble and contains gel-forming abilities; found in apples, strawberries, citrus fruits.
Pectins (cement) *GI: can be almost entirely fermented by GI bacteria (alpha 1-4 linkages) *be able to write this definition/discuss
A functional fiber polysaccharide of glucose & sorbitol units used as a bulking agent or sugar substitute.
Polydextrose
A functional fiber; mucilage from husk of psyllium seeds with high water binding capacity and provides viscosity; used as a laxative and must ingest plenty of fluids.
Psyllium ex: Metamucil (bulking agent)
A type of starch that cannot be digested or absorbed by humans.
Resistant Starch
Which has a higher water-holding capacity? Water soluble fibers: pectins, gums, and some hemicelluloses? or Insoluble fibers: cellulose and lignin.
Water soluble fiber has a higher water-holding capacity. Soluble fibers may bind up to SEVERAL times their weight in water, producing a viscous, slow-moving solution that often traps nutrients to slow down digestion and absorption within the GIT.
Refers to the ability of fiber in food to bind water.
Water-holding or hydration capacity (of food) **Think of fiber as a dry sponge that hydrates or soaks up water and digestive juices as it moves through the GIT.
nondigestible CHO & lignin that are intact & intrinsic in plants
dietary fiber (key word: plant)
What other factors does water-holding capacity depend on.........besides just fiber's solubility in water?
pH of GIT SIZE of particle fiber Degree to which foods are processed ....all influence water-holding capacity and in turn, physiologic effects.
Describe difference b/w soluble and insoluble fiber. See p117 pic.
soluble - dissolves in hot water; feel fuller longer, delays gastric emptying insoluble - does not dissolve in hot water; moves things along quickly b/c it cleans out the colon.
There are 4 types of Resistant Starch. Discuss the two Dietary Fiber types.
(Dietary Fiber) RS1 - plant cell walls *seeds, legumes, (unprocessed) whole grains RS2 - ungelatinized starch granules *(uncooked) potato & high amylose corn
Discuss the Functional Fiber types (of Resistant Starch).
(Functional Fibers) RS3 - retrograde starch from cooking and cooling or extruding foods. *ex: cooked and cooled rice, pasta, potato RS4 - Chemically modified starch *not found in nature
Which fibers are considered dietary AND functional fiber?
(Table 4.1) Cellulose Pectin Lignin Gums Beta-Glucans Fructans Resistant starches
Which fibers are ONLY functional fiber?
(Table 4.1) Chitan & chitosan Polydextrose & polyols Psyllium Resistant dextrins
Which fibers are ONLY dietary fibers?
(Table 4.1) Hemicellulose
Ingesting FIBERS that can HOLD WATER and create VISCOUS solutions w/in the GIT causes a number of effects. List.
*Delayed (slowed) emptying from the stomach *Reduced mixing of GI contents with digestive enzymes *Reduced enzyme function *Decreased nutrient diffusion rates (and thus delayed nutrient absorption) *altered small intestine transit time (read details on each p.119)
What are examples of insoluble fibers?
cellulose, lignin, chitin/chitosan, some hemicelluloses and pectins, some resistant starches. Ex: whole grain products, wheat and corn bran, nuts, seeds, some veg, and some fruit.
The term fiber that appears on FOOD LABELS reflects ONLY ___________ fiber.
dietary
nondigestible CHO that are isolated, extracted, or manufactured & known to have physiological benefits.
functional fiber (key word: manufactured)