| Nutrition Definitions You Should Know |
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| by Charles Stuart Platkin | |
| Sunday, 09 July 2006 | |
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All you have to do is turn on the TV or radio or open up almost any newspaper or magazine, and you’ll run smack into one of these terms. And, yes, you might kind of know what they mean, but not exactly. The following are just a few of the many nutrition definitions worth knowing: Functional Foods High-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) “The final product is a combination of glucose and fructose, usually either 42 percent fructose or 55 percent fructose with the rest mostly glucose,” says Joanne R. Lupton, Ph.D., a professor of nutrition at Texas A&M University. The 55 percent HFCS is often used to sweeten soft drinks, and the 42 percent HFCS is used to sweeten baked goods. “Both of these concentrations of HFCS are 'high' as compared to corn syrup (which has no fructose). However, when people discuss HFCS they usually compare it to sucrose (ordinary table sugar). Sucrose is 50 percent glucose and 50 percent fructose, so HFCS is NOT high with respect to sucrose,” adds Lupton. Some experts believe that the higher proportion of fructose to glucose creates unique harm. “It is easier for fructose to be made into fat than for glucose to be made into fat. Additionally, there is relatively strong literature showing negative consequences of fructose compared to glucose with respect to raising fatty substances in the blood,” says Lupton. It’s also been suggested that the rise in obesity in the United States is related to the rise in HFCS consumption. “However, most evidence suggests that the metabolic effects of sucrose and HFCS are pretty similar. What makes HFCS such a hazard is that corn growth is highly subsidized in the U.S., so HFCS is very inexpensive -- and thus a tempting additive to many foods,” says David L. Katz, M.D., associate professor of public health and director of the Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine and author of The Flavor Point Diet (Rodale, 2006). Therefore, it’s been argued that adding HFCS leads to an increased consumption of foods that are less nutrient dense, leading to greater calorie consumption and eventually weight gain. Nutrient Density As Dr. Katz explains: The opposite of nutrient dense is calorie dense or nutrient dilute -- foods that mainly supply calories with relatively few nutrients. These are often referred to as “empty calories” -- calories that provide few or no health benefits. Foods that are nutrient dense should provide 50 percent more in nutrients than they cost in calories. Take sunflower seeds for example. A quarter-cup packs about 200 calories, which doesn’t seem like a Calorie Bargain when you consider that a can of Sprite has only 140 calories and a Hershey’s Kiss has only 25. But that quarter-cup of seeds also provides more than 20 percent of the daily value for folate and vitamin B5 and over 25 percent for phosphorous, tryptophan, copper, magnesium and manganese. Meanwhile, the 200 calories are only about 11 percent of daily calorie needs. So you’re getting twice as many nutrients as calories. Some foods are almost always nutrient dense: whole grains and whole-grain products, fruits, vegetables and legumes. Remember that a food doesn’t have to be extremely low-fat or low-calorie to be nutrient dense -- it just has to counterbalance the calorie count with an exceptional level of nutritional value. Macronutrients Macronutrients supply calories, whereas micronutrients do not. As a result, recommendations for macronutrients take calories into consideration and must be balanced against one another, says Lupton. The general recommendation for adults (which varies according to weight) is 45 percent to 65 percent of total daily calories from carbs, 20-35 percent from fat and 10-35 percent from protein. Micronutrients Fortified Foods One of the most popular examples is milk fortified with vitamin D. In addition to providing milk drinkers with an extra vitamin, the added ingredient increases the rate at which the body absorbs the calcium naturally found in milk. Some experts suggest that fortified foods should be treated like supplements -- only to help you meet nutrient needs you cannot otherwise meet. “Fortified foods should not replace the goal of a balanced, plant-based diet -- a plate comprised of at least two-thirds fruits, vegetables, grains and beans -- as the crucial step to supply the nutrients and protective phytochemicals we need,” says Karen Collins, M.S., R.D., a nutritionist at the American Institute for Cancer Research. Enriched Foods However, according to Dr. Lupton, the mostly
generally accepted definition of an enriched food is one in which
nutrients that were lost in processing have been replaced. For
instance, when certain foods, such as grains, are refined, they lose
many of the nutrients they had in their original form. Once the food
has been processed, manufacturers reintroduce (usually at higher
levels) the vitamins and minerals that have been leached. In flour,
thiamin, riboflavin, iron and niacin lost in the translation from wheat
to white are often added again to the final white flour. This process
is technically called “restoration” but appears most often on food
labels as “enriched. CHARLES STUART PLATKIN is a nutrition and public health advocate, author of the best seller Breaking the Pattern (Plume, 2005), Breaking the FAT Pattern (Plume, 2006) and Lighten Up (Penguin USA/Razorbill, 2006) and founder of Integrated Wellness Solutions. Copyright 2006 by Charles Stuart Platkin. Sign up for the free The Diet Detective newsletter at www.dietdetective.com Trackback(0)
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