Nutrition 219: Study Guide Exam 4
What are the recommended behaviors to help prevent obesity?
Diet, limit consumption of sweets, eat more fruits and veggies, 60 minutes of physical activity
What practices should be totally eliminated during pregnancy?
Drinking alcohol, illicit drugs, smoking, chewing tabacco, and consult a doctor for medical drugs and herbal supplements
What are the characteristics of adolescent food habits and intakes?
Females: puberty age 10-11, peak at 12, iron for menstruation Males: puberty age 12-13, peak at 14, iron for lean body mass, snacks provide 1/4 of teenage intake, 1/3 of meals eaten away from home, skip breakfast, drink soda, influence by peers
What is the major storage form of iron?
Ferritin
Understand concept of a "critical period"
Finite periods of intense development and rapid cell division, the development of each organ and tissues is most vulnerable to adverse influences during its own critical period.
What are the components of fitness?
Flexibility, muscle strength and endurance, and cardio respiratory.
What nutrients are required in higher amounts due to their role in red blood cell synthesis?
Folate, iron, and zinc
Zinc deficiency may result in what condition?
Growth retardation, arrested sexual maturity, diarrhea, impaired immune response, damage of the CNS, hair loss, eye and skin lesions, and loss of appetite
What iron containing compound carries oxygen in the bloodstream?
Hemoglobin
What advantage does breast feeding have over formula?
Imunological protection--colostrum produced in the first 2-3 days, contains antibodies and WBCs, Bifidus factors, lactoferrin, Lactadherin, growth factors, lipase enzymes, sterile
What mineral is necessary for thyroxine production?
Iodine
What is the most preventable nutrient deficiency amount U.S. children?
Iron
High intake of milk may lead to what deficiency in children?
Iron deficiency
What does calcium do to iron?
It decreases the absorption of it
What substance builds up in tissue when those tissues are deprived of oxygen?
Lactic acid
What binds with Zinc and limits its bio-availability?
Methallothionein
What is the common gastrointestinal problem associated with pregnancy?
Morning sickness, constipation, heartburn, food and non-food cravings.
What protein carries oxygen in the muscle cells?
Myoglobin
What is the recommendation for alcohol in pregnancy issued by the Surgeon General?
No alcohol consumption
What is the function of the placenta?
Performs the function of respiration, absorption, and excretion for the fetus
What is the best food sources of iodine?
Processed foods, salt, seafood, bread, dairy products, plants grown in iodine-rich soil, and animals fed those plants
What affect do nutritional inadequacies have on milk of a lactating woman?
Reduced quantity
What are the benefits of cardio respiratory conditioning?
Cardiac output is increased and enhances oxygen delivery, heart stronger-pumps more blood per minute, resting heart rate decreases, breathing more efficient, improves circulation, and reduces blood pressure.
Who is the most susceptible to iron deficiency?
10% of toddlers, adolescent girls, women of childbearing age
What is the minimum recommended weight gain for a pregnant obese woman?
11-20 lbs
What is the average lifespan of the RBC?
120 days (4 months)
How many extra calories are needed per day during lactation?
1800 kcal a day or 330 kcal extra for the first 6 months and 400 kcal the next 6 months
During vigorous physical activity, how long until glycogen reserves are depleted?
2 hours
How many hours a day does the AAP recommend limiting TV to?
2 hrs
What percent of body water loss will affect physical performance?
2%
What is the expected weight gain of an infant in the first year?
20-25 lbs
Ideally how much weight should a normal women gain during pregnancy?
25-35 lbs
What percent of U.S. children are overweight?
32% of 1/3 of children
How many extra calories are needed per day in the 2nd and 3rd trimester?
340 kcal a day in the 2nd 450 kcal a day in the 3rd
At what age is an infant ready to swallow solid foods?
4-6 months
When is the first cereal introduced to infants? Why?
4-6 months, because it is least allergenic
What is the energy requirements for infants?
450 kcal per day or 100 kcal per kilogram
At what stage in pregnancy is there a beating heart and complete nervous system?
8 weeks
What is the energy that drives immediate muscle contractions?
ATP
What is a food intolerance?
Adverse reaction to foods and other discomforts such as stomach ache, headache, rapid pulse rate, nausea, wheezing, hives, bronchial irritations, cough, symptoms WITHOUT antibody production
At what age can you introduce whole milk to a child?
After age 1
What transports Zinc?
Albumin and transferrin
What are the likely reasons for the increase in childhood obesity over the past 30 years?
Convenience foods, meals eaten away from home, non-nutritious choices at schools, sedentary activities, soft drinks
What are the nutrient difference between cow's milk compared to human breast milk?
Cow's milk contains 20% protein, 51% fat, and 29% carbs, whereas human breast milk has 6% protein, 55% fat, and 39% carbs.
What is pica?
Craving for ice, clay, and dirt.
What can result from iodine deficiency during pregnancy?
Cretinism in the child, major birth defects in baby
What period of pregnancy would the most damages occur from alcohol?
during the 1st trimester
What fuel is used predominantly by muscle cells after about 20 minutes of low or moderate physical activity?
fat and less glycogen
What are the best sources of fluoride?
fluorinated drinking water, tea, seafood
What nutrient is depleted when a runner "hits the wall"?
glycogen
What nutrient raises muscle glycogen concentration?
high carb
What type of diet promotes superior performance in athletes?
high carb
What is the progressive overload principle?
to slightly increase comfortable capacity
What nutrient is depleted most rapidly with exercise?
water
What should be the composition of the pregame meal in the athlete?
water and carbs 300-800 kcal, low protein and fat
What factors enhance the absorption of iron?
when iron stores are depleted, with increased body need -pregnancy, with rapid growth and development
Which nutrients are particularly difficult to meed the RDA during pregnancy?
iron and calcium
Which nutrients increases their absorption in pregnancy?
iron and calcium
What is the function of the MFP?
it enhances absorption of non-heme iron from foods eatne at the same meal
What is the major cause of iron deficiency?
low iron stores
In what foods is MFP found in?
meats, fish, and poultry
What is muscle atrophy?
muscle loss in size and strength, the result of lack of activity
What are the best sources of zinc?
oysters, shelllfish, meats, poultry, milk, cheese, peanuts, legumes
What foods have iron added to them to make them in fortification?
pastas, breads, cereals, grains- iron enriched grains
Which foods most often cause allergies?
peanuts, milk, eggs, soy, also tree nuts, wheat, fish, and shellfish.
What foods reduce the absorption of iron?
phytates- in legumes, whole grains, rice, vegetable proteins- in soybeans. legumes, nuts, calcium- in milk, tannic acid- in coffee and tea
Why should you avoid fiber in the pregame meal?
soluble fiber slow it down and holds water in the GI tract
What is the minimum time cardio-respiratory endurance episodes should be sustained for maximum benefits?
work 20 minutes or longer, use large muscle groups, train at intensity to increase heart rate.
What condition results from iodine deficiency?
the body's thyriod hormone decreases, secretes more TSH, thyroid gland enlarges resulting in a goiter
What protein carries iron in the bloodstream?
Transferrin
What is the process of iron absorption and recycling?
Transferrin carries iron in the blood, bone marrow incorporates iron into hemoglobin of RBC and stores exccess iron in ferritin and hemosiderin, iron-containing hemoglobin in RBC carries oxygen, Liver and spleen dismantle RBC, packages iron into transferrin, and stores excess iron in ferritin and hemosiderin.
What is "nursing bottle" tooth decay?
Upper and lower tooth decay that can be caused by formula, milk, or juice due to prolonged exposure when sleeping
What nutrient may need to be supplemented in the breast fed infant?
Vitamin D and fluoride, also iron after 6 months
What is the process of zinc absorption and recycling?
Zinc in food, goes into mucosal cells in the intestine store excess in metallothionein, If not needed: excreted in shed intestinal cells, zinc absorption reduced when body doesn't need zinc, If needed: Metallothionein releases zinc to albumin and transferrin for transport, pancreas uses zinc to make digestive enzymes and secretes them into the intestine
Approximately what percentage of iron is normally absorbed overall?
about 18% in mixed diets, about 10% in vegetarian diets
When can low fat milk be introduced to a child?
after the age of 2
What is the composition of formula compared to human breast milk?
attempt to copy composition of breast milk, iron fortified, no protective antibodies, safe prep
What characteristics might you seen in children who skip breakfast?
behavior and performance affected, poor concentration, shorter attention span, lower score in IQ test
The neural tube forms the initial part of what structure?
brain and spinal cord
What deficiency would a low level of hemoglobin indicate?
Anemia deficiency
What can pregnant women do to alleviate her nausea?
Arise slowly, eat dry toast or crackers, chew gum or suck on hard candy, eat small frequent meals.
How can you help avoid allergies in infants when starting solid foods?
try new foods every 3-5 days and one at a time
What is a food allergy?
Anaphylactic shock--life threatening food allergy reaction, epinephrine injections can be used to counteract the shock
What is the definition of fitness?
The characteristics that enable the body to perform physical activity, the demands with enough reserve energy to rise to a sudden challenge.
What is the best indicator of an infant's overall health status?
The infants birth weight.
What foods should be avoided in infants?
corn syrup, honey, sweets, canned vegetables, carrots, cherries, hot dogs, marshmallows, etc
What condition does fluoride deficiency result in?
susceptibility to tooth decay