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Diet |
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Basic approach of nutrition: food | | The
functioning, growth and good health of the human body depends on a daily supply
in nutrients. The essential nutrients for life are:
- Macronutrients: proteins, lipids, glucides - Micronutrients: vitamins, minerals and oligo-elements. | | | |  | Proteins and amino-acids | | Proteins are elements that play a part in building our cells. They are our main source of energy, necessary for all kinds of metabolic processes. Our skin, muscles, internal organs, hormones, enzymes, genes and all sorts of tissues are made of proteins. Because of the major role they play, a diet
deprived of proteins is likely to cause problems and various diseases. Food
supplies us with animal proteins (meats, fishes, eggs and milk products) and
proteins of vegetable origin (dried vegetables, cereals and
soya).
A protein is made up from a chain of amino-acids. During digestion, the links between these are broken by enzymes, which results in a liberation of amino-acids. All of these are required for our organism to synthesize its own proteins. Some amino-acids can be produced by the organism, but others can only be supplied by food. The latter are called 'essential amino-acids'. This notion of 'essential amino-acids' establishes the notion of 'biological value' of a protein. Thus some vegetal proteins have a limited value, i.e. a poor fraction of amino-acids. It is therefore necessary to associate different foodstuffs in one's diet in order to obtain a good biological protein. Examples of associations | milk + cereals | --> | 'milk-semolina' | | cereals + dried vegetables | --> | 'couscous' | | cereals + dried fruits | --> | 'tabbouleh' | Concerning animal proteins, they have a good biological
value, and they are often found in the giblets or offals or meat.
Energetic equivalence of proteins: 1 g of protein = 4 calories = 17 KJ. | |
| | |  | Lipids and fatty-acids | | Food-fats or lipids are essential parts of our body. Half of our brain for instance is made of lipids. However, the need for lipids is not great. Lipids are useful as a reserve of energy in case of sustained deficiency. Lipids bring us also vitamins A, E and K. The sources for lipids are either animal (eggs, meats, fishes, cold cuts, butter, cream and cheese) or vegetal (oils, margarine, oleaginous fruits). Lipids are made of fatty-acids. We can distinguish the saturated fatty-acids and the unsaturated fatty-acids.
| - | The saturated fatty-acids are present mainly in animal fats, and the unsaturated fatty-acids in vegetable fats. Because of their major biological role, some unsaturated fatty-acids are called essential, but our body is unable to synthesize them itself. They are provided to our organism by food, mainly vegetable oils and fish. | | - | Saturated fatty-acids are more valuable than the unsaturated type because they keep the cholesterol level down, particularly the 'bad cholesterol', thus protecting our cardio-vascular system. | Energetic value of lipids: 1 g of lipid = 9 calories = 38 KJ | |
| | |  | Glucides or carbo-hydrates | |
Glucides play essentially an energetic role.
They are our main source of energy through the provision of glucose, which is
the fuel for all cell-types in the human body. For example, glucides are the
only source of energy which the brain can utilize, as it is unable to store
energy. Sources for glucose in food are mainly of vegetable origin :
leguminous plants, cereals, potatoes (starch), and also fruits, vegetables,
sugar beet, and sugar cane. A small fraction of glucides comes from the animal
world : milk products and liver (glycogen). We can separate :
| - |
Rapid
sugars: they have a short chain, and are quickly digested, thus
rapidly increasing the sugar blood level (glycaemia). |
| - |
Low sugars:
they have a long chain, and are slowly digested, with a progressive
increase of glycaemia. |
Energetic value of glucides: 1g of
glucose = 4 calories = 17 KJ | |
| | |  | Food fibres | |
Fibres are substances that stem from plants and
bypass the digestion in the small bowel of a healthy human being. There are two
types de fibres : those that can be broken down by the colic flora, and the
insoluble fibres, that are hardly, if at all broken down. They stem from the
vegetal terrestrial world (cereals, leguminous, fruits and vegetables), and from
the see-world (seaweeds). The feeding fibres play an important part in the
nutritional balance and the metabolism : regulation of the intestinal transit,
control on food-intake via their effect on satiety.
Energetic value of fibres: 1 g of
fibres = 0 calorie | |
| | |  | Minerals | |
Minerals are not a source of energy, but they are
incorporated in cell-structures (cell-membranes, bones, etc.). The only source
for the body is from food, because the organism cannot create them by itself.
Besides, minerals are necessary for the activity of enzymes and hormones. The
main minerals and their effects are described below.
|
Mineral |
Role |
Sources |
|
Calcium |
Growth and mineralization of the
bones Neuromuscular excitability Blood coagulation Control of the
heart-rhythm |
Milk food |
|
Potassium |
Muscular contraction Tissue construction
|
Coffee, cocoa, yeast, dried
fruits and oleaginous fruits |
|
Sodium |
Regulates the movements of water
inside the organism Hydrates cells |
Regular salt, canned food, pork
meats, cheeses, crackers |
|
Magnesium |
Neuromuscular
excitability |
Chocolate, cocoa, coffee,
wheatgerm, dried fruits and oleaginous, cereals |
| Phosphore |
Bone mineralization, enzyme
reactions |
Present in many
foods | | |
| | |  | Oligo-elements | | Very small amounts are present
inside our body, but they play a major role in various metabolic reactions. The
most significant are Iron, Zinc, Copper, Chromium, Selenium, Iodine, Manganesium
and Cobalt. | |
| | |  | Vitamins | |
They are necessary for a healthy life. A varying
and balanced food supplies us with our needs for vitamins. Like minerals and
oligo-elements, vitamins do not have a nutritional value. They are active
molecules required in very small amounts, but a deficiency can cause severe
diseases or dysfunctions. Vitamins are separated in two categories :
| - |
Liposoluble
vitamins: vitamins A, D, E, K |
| - |
Hydrosoluble
vitamins: vitamins from groups B and
C |
|
Vitamines |
Rôles |
Sources |
|
A |
Vision |
Eggs, fat-food (cream, butter,
full-cream milk, cheeses), vegetables and coloured
fruits |
|
D |
|
Egg yolk, full-cream milk,
butter, fat fishes, cheeses |
|
E |
Anti - oxydant |
Oils and
wheat-germ |
|
K |
Anti - coagulant |
Leaf-vegetables,
tomatoes |
| B |
Protein, lipid, glucide
metabolism |
Cereals, dried vegetables,
vegetables, yeast, beer, eggs, offal, liver |
| C |
Immunity |
Vegetables, fruits and
liver | | |
| | |  | Beverages and water | |
One has to drink an average of 1.5 litres of water
a day. Water is the only liquid essential to the body. This is important to
ensure the hydration of our cells and the elimination of wastes through the
kidney. If you find it hard to drink those 1.5 litres, here is a trick that
will help to cover your daily needs:
| - |
Always carry a bottle of water with you;
this will remind you to drink and help you evaluate the amount you have
already drunk. |
| - |
Replace tap-water by other unsweetened
waters, such as: |
| |
- Mineral waters with gas (e.g. Perrier…)
that contain some essential minerals. - Infusions, herbal teas, light
coffee - Vegetable stock (that deliver vitamins and minerals).
| | |
| | |  | Equivalences | |
When you are following a diet, it is
important to avoid weariness. Equivalences may help to alternate foods. Thus
food-intake can vary according to individual tastes.
For example, one can
replace:
- A pear by an apricot
purée (without added sugar) - A chicken leg by a fish filet
| - |
Milk
food |
|
| |
1 glass (=125 ml) of half-cream
milk |
= 1 plain yoghourt = 1 white
cheese 20% fat content = 2 petits-suisses 20% fat content
|
| - |
Bread |
|
| |
30 g of bread |
= 1 slice of bread = 30 g whole-wheat
bread, with bran or cereals = 2 Melba toasts = 20g cereals (special
K, Fitness...) |
| - |
Fat
food |
|
| |
15 g of butter |
= 15g margarine = 60g 15% fresh
cream = 20g diet mayonnaise = 10g oil (1 table-spoonful)
|
| - |
Fruits |
|
| |
1 fruit |
= 1 apple, 1 pear, 1 orange = 1 fruit
purée without added sugar (100g) = ½ banana = 1 glas of fruit-juice
without sugar = ¼ fresh pineapple = 2 kiwis = 2 clementines =
1 peach = 3 apricots = 2 to 4 plums = ½ grape-fruit = 150g
strawberry or banana = 10-15 cherries = 10-15 grapes = 200g
melon or water-melon |
| - |
Meats,
fishes and eggs |
| |
100 g of meat |
= 150 g fish = 100 g fowl = 2 eggs =
2 slices of ham, turkey or chicken = 180 g shell-fish = 18
oysters = 25-30 mussels |
| - |
Starchy
food |
| |
100 g of starchy
food |
= 100 g boiled potatoes =100 g boiled
rice, pasta or semolina, or 25g uncooked = 100 g cooked dried
vegetables (lentils, dried beans…) or 30-35 g uncooked = 40 g
bread = 100 g cooked corn = 100 g peas = 25 g
flour | | |
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