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Balanced Diet
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A balanced diet is a diet providing the appropriate amounts of nutrients and water
to support normal growth, development and maintenance of the body's cells, tissues
and organs. |
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BMI
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Body Mass Index (BMI) is a statistical measurement which compares a person's weight and height and is commonly used to classify weight as "healthy" or "unhealthy". |
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BMR
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Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) is the amount of calories burned at rest. |
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Calcium
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Is a mineral found in dairy products, in beans and dark green vegetables, essential
for growth and maintenance of bones and teeth.
Associated to vitamin D, calcium helps in preventing osteoporosis
It is also important for muscle contraction, hormones and enzyme secretion, and
for sending messages through the nervous system. |
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Calorie
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Calorie is the unit of heat expenditure. The SI (International System of Units)
unit of measurement is the Joule. In nutrition, the Calorie is commonly used to
measure the energy provided by the proteins, carbohydrates, fat, and alcohols consumed. |
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Carbohydrates
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Are nutrients used as the main energy source of the cells and the brain. Carbohydrates
are stored as glycogen in the human body. They can be simples or complex (chains
or simple sugars). 1 g of carbohydrate = 4 calories |
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Cholesterol
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Lipidic and waxy component of cell membranes, function of which is to provide permeability and fluidity to the membranes. |
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Coronary Heart Disease
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Failure of the coronary artery to supply blood to the heart muscle. One cause can be the buildup of cholesterol in the artery, narrowing the path of blood flow.
Consequences can be chest pain and/or heart attack. |
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Diabetes
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Disease where the body is not able to produce or properly use insulin, the hormone
helping glucose to enter in the cells. Symptoms are frequent urination, extreme
thirst and hunger, weight loss, fatigue.
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Diet |
Amount of food and drinks consumed by one person. For medical, religious or other
reasons, a diet can exclude certain types of food. |
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Digestion
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The process where the body breaks down food into its smaller parts, which
are called nutrients that are used as energy, substrates for tissue growth and maintenance of certain biological functions. |
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Energy
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Energy is released from nutrients and used for vital body functions.
Calorie is the unit of heat expenditure.
1g of carbohydrates = 4 calories
1g of fat = 9 calories
1g of protein = 4 calories
1g of alcohol = 7 calories |
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Enriched
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Also called "restoration", enrichment indicates the addition of nutrients to
food or drinks to replace nutrients that may have been lost through processing,
as
an example: enriched flour.
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Fat
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Fats are a type of nutrient providing 9 calories per gram. They are a combination of saturated and unsaturated fatty acids. Fats have important functions such as helping in the absorption of liposoluble vitamins (A,D,E & K). However, their consumption must be limited in order to avoid obesity and/or heart diseases. |
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Fiber
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Fiber are carbohydrates that are not digested, and appear to reduce the risk of heart disease, diabetes, diverticular disease, and constipation. |
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Hypocaloric diet
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Diet low in calories
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Iron
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Essential component of proteins involved in oxygen transport. |
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Lipids
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Group including any fat-soluble naturally occuring molecules. Triglycerides (including
fats) are a subcategory of this group.
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Metabolism
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Biochemical reactions occuring in the body to maintain life. |
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Nutrients
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Components provided by the ingestion of food and used as energy, substrates for
tissue growth and maintenance or for certain biological functions. Examples of nutrients
are Carbohydrates, Fats, Proteins, Fibers, Vitamins, Minerals, Water. |
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Nutrition
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Ingestion of the necessary nutrients to support life. |
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Obesity
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Obesity is commonly characterized by a Body Mass Index of >30. Obesity is considered as a disease when the amount of fat stored in the body is too great. Obesity
increases
the probability of diseases such as type II diabetes, coronary heart disease,
cancer, sleep apnea, osteoarthritis, hypertension. |
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Overweight
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Overweight is defined as having more body fat (adipose tissue) than is optimally healthy. Obesity is commonly characterized by a Body Mass Index of 25.0 to 29.9. |
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Proteins
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Proteins are essentials nutrients used for growth and maintenance of the body. A
healthy diet should include animal and vegetable sources of proteins. |
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Refined
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As opposed to whole grains, refined grains are grains for which the bran and germ
was removed. Refined grain are of a lesser nutritional interest than whole grains. |
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Saturated Fat |
Saturated fat is a type of fatty acids characteristics of which are to be solid at room temperature, and whose fatty acid chains cannot incorporate additional hydrogen atoms. Saturated fat raises blood cholesterol more than other forms of fat. Saturated
fat should represent less than 10 percent of total calories in a
healthy diet. The fats from meat, poultry (especially the skin), whole milk, butter, cream are the
main sources of saturated fats; as well as bakery products that are
rich in butter. |
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Starches |
Starches are complex carbohydrates that are broken down progressively into
simple sugars before being metabolized.
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Sugars
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Sugars are simple carbohydrates used by our body as energy. Sugars present in fruit
and dairy have a better nutritional interest than added sugars (simple sugars added during food processing: corn syrup, white sugar, brown sugar…) |
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Triglyceride
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A triglyceride is compound consisting of three fatty acids plus glycerol.
It is the main constituent of vegetable oil and animal fat.
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Unsaturated Fat
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Unsaturated fat are characterized by one or more double bonds in the fatty acid
chain. A fatty acid with one double bond is called "monounsaturated". Fatty acids
having more than one double bond are called "polyunsaturated". They mainly come from vegetable sources and fish. Unsaturated fats are healthier
than saturated fats
but their consumption must also be limited as the total fat consumption should not exceed 30% of calories. |
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Vegan
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A diet that excludes the consumption of meat, poultry and seafood and animal products
such as eggs, dairy, honey. |
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Vegetarian
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A diet that excludes the consumption of meat, poultry and seafood. |
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Vitamins
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Vitamins are organic compounds which are required in small amounts by the organisms and must be obtained from the diet. Examples of essential vitamins:
vitamins-B group, and vitamins A, C, D, E and K. |
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Whole Grain
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Unrefined cereal, including the germ, endosperm and bran, are sources of fiber and minerals. EX: brown rice, whole wheat flour, oatmeal, barley, bulghur. |