Human Nutrition.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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is one of the most preventable types of cancer.
Nutritionists caution that most Americans need to eat more complex carbohydrates.
In the typical American diet, only 40 to 50 percent of total calories come fromcarbohydrates—a lower percentage than found in most of the world.
To make matters worse, half of the carbohydrate calories consumed by the typical American comefrom processed foods filled with simple sugars.
Experts recommend that these foods make up no more that 10 percent of our diet, because these foods offer nonutritional value.
Foods rich in complex carbohydrates, which provide vitamins, minerals, some protein, and dietary fiber and are an abundant energy source, shouldmake up roughly 50 percent of our daily calories.
V PROTEINS
Dietary proteins are powerful compounds that build and repair body tissues, from hair and fingernails to muscles.
In addition to maintaining the body’s structure,proteins speed up chemical reactions in the body, serve as chemical messengers, fight infection, and transport oxygen from the lungs to the body’s tissues.
Althoughprotein provides 4 calories of energy per gram, the body uses protein for energy only if carbohydrate and fat intake is insufficient.
When tapped as an energy source,protein is diverted from the many critical functions it performs for our bodies.
Proteins are made of smaller units called amino acids.
Of the more than 20 amino acids our bodies require, eight (nine in some older adults and young children) cannotbe made by the body in sufficient quantities to maintain health.
These amino acids are considered essential and must be obtained from food.
When we eat food high inproteins, the digestive tract breaks this dietary protein into amino acids.
Absorbed into the bloodstream and sent to the cells that need them, amino acids thenrecombine into the functional proteins our bodies need.
Animal proteins, found in such food as eggs, milk, meat, fish, and poultry, are considered complete proteins because they contain all of the essential amino acids ourbodies need.
Plant proteins, found in vegetables, grains, and beans, lack one or more of the essential amino acids.
However, plant proteins can be combined in the dietto provide all of the essential amino acids.
A good example is rice and beans.
Each of these foods lacks one or more essential amino acids, but the amino acids missingin rice are found in the beans, and vice versa.
So when eaten together, these foods provide a complete source of protein.
Thus, people who do not eat animal products(see Vegetarianism) can meet their protein needs with diets rich in grains, dried peas and beans, rice, nuts, and tofu, a soybean product.
Experts recommend that protein intake make up only 10 percent of our daily calorie intake.
Some people, especially in the United States and other developed countries,consume more protein than the body needs.
Because extra amino acids cannot be stored for later use, the body destroys these amino acids and excretes their by-products.
Alternatively, deficiencies in protein consumption, seen in the diets of people in some developing nations, may result in health problems.
Marasmus andkwashiorkor, both life-threatening conditions, are the two most common forms of protein malnutrition.
Some health conditions, such as illness, stress, and pregnancy and breast-feeding in women, place an enormous demand on the body as it builds tissue or fightsinfection, and these conditions require an increase in protein consumption.
For example, a healthy woman normally needs 45 grams of protein each day.
Expertsrecommend that a pregnant woman consume 55 grams of protein per day, and that a breast-feeding mother consume 65 grams to maintain health.
A man of average size should eat 57 grams of protein daily.
To support their rapid development, infants and young children require relatively more protein than doadults.
A three-month-old infant requires about 13 grams of protein daily, and a four-year-old child requires about 22 grams.
Once in adolescence, sex hormonedifferences cause boys to develop more muscle and bone than girls; as a result, the protein needs of adolescent boys are higher than those of girls.
VI FATS
Fats, which provide 9 calories of energy per gram, are the most concentrated of the energy-producing nutrients, so our bodies need only very small amounts.
Fats playan important role in building the membranes that surround our cells and in helping blood to clot.
Once digested and absorbed, fats help the body absorb certainvitamins.
Fat stored in the body cushions vital organs and protects us from extreme cold and heat.
Fat consists of fatty acids attached to a substance called glycerol.
Dietary fats are classified as saturated, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated according to thestructure of their fatty acids.
Animal fats—from eggs, dairy products, and meats—are high in saturated fats and cholesterol, a chemical substance found in all animalfat.
Vegetable fats—found, for example, in avocados, olives, some nuts, and certain vegetable oils—are rich in monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fat.
As we willsee, high intake of saturated fats can be unhealthy.
To understand the problem with eating too much saturated fat, we must examine its relationship to cholesterol.
High levels of cholesterol in the blood have been linkedto the development of heart disease, strokes, and other health problems.
Despite its bad reputation, our bodies need cholesterol, which is used to build cell membranes,to protect nerve fibers, and to produce vitamin D and some hormones, chemical messengers that help coordinate the body’s functions.
We just do not need cholesterolin our diet.
The liver, and to a lesser extent the small intestine, manufacture all the cholesterol we require.
When we eat cholesterol from foods that contain saturatedfatty acids, we increase the level of a cholesterol-carrying substance in our blood that harms our health.
Cholesterol, like fat, is a lipid—an organic compound that is not soluble in water.
In order to travel through blood, cholesterol therefore must be transported through thebody in special carriers, called lipoproteins.
High-density lipoproteins (HDLs) remove cholesterol from the walls of arteries, return it to the liver, and help the liverexcrete it as bile, a liquid acid essential to fat digestion.
For this reason, HDL is called “good” cholesterol.
Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs) and very-low-density lipoproteins (VLDLs) are considered “bad” cholesterol.
Both LDLs and VLDLs transport cholesterol from the liver tothe cells.
As they work, LDLs and VLDLs leave plaque-forming cholesterol in the walls of the arteries, clogging the artery walls and setting the stage for heart disease.Almost 70 percent of the cholesterol in our bodies is carried by LDLs and VLDLs, and the remainder is transported by HDLs.
For this reason, we need to consumedietary fats that increase our HDLs and decrease our LDL and VLDL levels.
Saturated fatty acids—found in foods ranging from beef to ice cream, to mozzarella cheese to doughnuts—should make up no more than 10 percent of a person’s totalcalorie intake each day.
Saturated fats are considered harmful to the heart and blood vessels because they are thought to increase the level of LDLs and VLDLs anddecrease the levels of HDLs.
Monounsaturated fats—found in olive, canola, and peanut oils—appear to have the best effect on blood cholesterol, decreasing the level of LDLs and VLDLs andincreasing the level of HDLs.
Polyunsaturated fats—found in margarine and sunflower, soybean, corn, and safflower oils—are considered more healthful than saturatedfats.
However, if consumed in excess (more than 10 percent of daily calories), they can decrease the blood levels of HDLs.
Most Americans obtain 15 to 50 percent of their daily calories from fats.
Health experts consider diets with more than 30 percent of calories from fat to be unsafe,increasing the risk of heart disease.
High-fat diets also contribute to obesity, which is linked to high blood pressure ( see hypertension) and diabetes mellitus.
A diet high in both saturated and unsaturated fats has also been associated with greater risk of developing cancers of the colon, prostate, breast, and uterus.
Choosing a diet thatis low in fat and cholesterol is critical to maintaining health and reducing the risk of life-threatening disease..
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Liens utiles
- TRAITÉ DE LA NATURE HUMAINE, A Treatise of Human Nature de David Hume (résumé & analyse)
- CONDITION DE L'HOMME MODERNE, The Human Condition, 1958. Hannah Arendt (résumé)
- to be human is to be in relation
- Human Rights Machinery
- Les fonctions de nutrition Synthèse construite par Sylvain sylvain.