Blogging on different aspects of human life for a better living on earth.
Wednesday, 12 October 2016
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE DIGESTION OF DIETARY FIBRE
Digestion is the systematic break down of food substances by enzymes to release the nutrients contained therein. The nutrients are absorbed mostly in the small intestine.
The residue, containing dietary fibre, travels along the large intestine until it reaches the rectum and later voided. The time taken for food to travel from the mouth to the rectum for voiding is called transit time.
Transit times have been found to be shorter in communities eating high fibre diet than those eating low fibre diets. This is because fibre absorbs water and swells, increasing the bulk of the intestine content which facilitates faster movement.
This faster movement may lead to decrease in absorption of nutrients particularly in the small intestines since the contents do not stay long enough for more nutrients to be absorbed.
When the chyme or intestinal contents get to the large intestine, digestion and absorption would have been completed. However, water is absorbed mostly at the colon.
High fiber diet reduces the amount of energy absorbed of food in the small intestine because there is less time for digestion and absorption.
According to Winter, high fibre diet may alter the types and number of bacteria in the bowel and possibly inhibit their production of carcinogens.
Moreover, low fibre diets are said to have low satiety value. Low fibre diets lead to constipation. This is due to decrease in frequency of bowel movements resulting to prolonged transit time.
During this period of delay, water absorption into the blood continues, resulting in a hard stool which is difficult to pass. Inadequate fluid intake and loss of muscle tone added to this problem.
So, diets with high fibre content is far better tha diets with low fibre content.
REFERENCES
Brownsell, V. I. Griffith, C. J. and Eleri, J. (1992). Applied Science Food Studies. Longman Science & Technical; UK.
Fox, B. A. and Cameron, A. G. (1989). Food Science, Nutrition and Health. 5th ed. Edward Arnold; A Division of Hodder &Stoughton, London.
DAY 23, 5 ESSENTIAL WISDOM TOOLS FOR A FRUITFUL LIFE
1. To succeed in life you should always be
concerned with what is right rather than
who is right.
2. Between you and anything you want to
accomplish ther is a constraint, or limiting factor, that
determines how fast you get to where you want to go.
- ELIYAHU GOLDRATT
3. To be a successful man or woman you should most of the time
think about solutions rather than think about problems and
difficulties.
4. Failure is merely an opportunity to more intelligently begin
again.
- HENRY FORD
5. It is a fact that successful people fail far more often than
unsuccessful people.
GOD BLESS.
Tuesday, 11 October 2016
DAY 22, 5 ESSENTIAL WISDOM TOOLS FOR A FRUITFUL LIFE
1. It's easy to be happy if you can
find happiness in small doses.
If you set impossible criteria for
happiness, then it will be all but
impossible for you to be happy.
2. The power to choose is one of the greatest gifts God has given
to us.
3. Wise men and women are always learning, always listening
for fresh insights.
- PROVERBS 18:15
4. When you refuse to settle for the status quo and continually
strive to evolve, you will stay ahead of the competition in
business and make a positive mark in life.
5. The people who do best in life are those who realise they have
the power to choose their attitudes, just as they have the power
to choose their clothing, or their cars.
GOD BLESS.
THE ADVERSE AND BENEFICIAL EFFECTS OF DIETARY FIBRE ON HUMANS
The effects of dietary fibre on humans are both nutritional and physiological. In both cases the effects are either positive or negative.
THE ADVERSE EFFECTS
The following adverse effects have been observed:
a. Decreased Absorption of Vitamin B12:-
It has been observed that too much intake of pectin from fibre may cause decreased absorption of vitamin B12.
b. Loss of Mineral Nutrients:-
The effects of increased dietary fibre intake on retention of trace elements, iron, zinc, and copper have been relatively consistent in both human and animal studies.
This indirectly predisposes humans or animals to rickets and oesteomalacia.
c. Diarrhoea:-
When someone is changing from a low to a high fibre diet, he/she is liable to abdominal discomfort. This is due to increased gas production in the colon.
Sometimes, the person experiences slight diarrhoea. All these symptoms are however, transient.
THE BENEFICIAL EFFECTS
The beneficial effects of increased consumption of dietary fibre by far out-weigh the adverse effects. Some of these beneficial effects are as follows:
a. Reduces blood sugar levels for Diabetics:-
High fibre diets level have proved to be of value to sufferers of diabetis mellitus.
Diets high in fibre slow down the release of glucose to the blood stream and in this way the symptoms of the disease are minimized.
b. Lowers Cholesterol concentration:-
Studies have shown that high fibre diets can lower the concentration of cholesterol in some people's blood.
This may account for the statistical link between high-fibre diets and lower incidence of coronary heart diseases.
c. Sources of Harmless Energy:-
Fibre are attacked and broken down by harmless bacteria which inhabit the colon and partly convert them(fibre) to short chain fatty acds, carbon (iv) oxide, hydrogen and methane.
The short chain fatty acids, mainly ethanoic, propanoic and butanoic acids are absorbed into the blood stream and may be used as source of energy.
d. Reduces Constipation:-
It has been reported that one of the best physiological effects of dietary fibre is on relieving constipation by modifying transit time through the intestine, increasing bulk and softening the faeces via greater water retention.
Constipation arises from intake of low fibre diets. This in turn leads to difficulty in voiding with the consequent causation of "straining" disseases such as haemorrhoids and variscose veins.
e. Reduces Obesity:-
Obesity related diseases are the commonest causes of death in some Countries.
Fibre reduces the energy intake of foods and thus reduces obesity which is caused by excessive energy intake.
Obesity predisposes people to a number of metabolic diseases such as coronary heart disease, and arteriosclerosis.
f. Prevention of Diverticular Disease:-
This is the commonest disease of the colon. Low fibre diets lead to decrease in size of stool, increased transit time and makes the faeces stay longer in the colon.
This leads to pressure build up and the consequent ballooning of the wall of the colon. This is called diverticulosis. Infection of the diverticuli leads to diverticulitis.
Small fecal volume due to low fibre diets, allows excessive segmentation of the colon. This leads to building up of pressures which will eventually lead to formation of button-shaped diverticuli.
g. Prevention of Large Bowel Cancer:-
Colon cancer is the most frequent type of cancer in North America and the second most common type in Britain.
Dietary fibre sweeps away poisonous substances (implicated as carcinogens) which are produced in the large bowel by the decomposition of bile salts.
h. Increases Satiety Value:-
Low fibre diets are also claimed to have a low satiety. It is suggested that it is easier to over eat when the diet is refined.
In general, there should be dietary fibre intake in food supplements. It is equally important that clinicians and health care workers emphasize the highest level of fiber inclusion in human diets.
REFERENCES
Bengham, S. (1978). Dictionary of Nutrition, A consumer's Guide to the Facts of Food. Barris & Jenkins, London.
Fox, B. A. and Cameron, A. G. (1989). Food Science, Nutrition and Health. 5th ed. Edward Arnold; A Division of Hodder & Stoughton, London.
Onimawo I. A. (1995). Season Variations in Energy Intake, Expenditure and Body Composition of Students in a Nigerian College of Agriculture. Ph.D Thesis, University of Ibadan, Nigeria.
Monday, 10 October 2016
DAY 21, 5 ESSENTIAL WISDOM TOOLS FOR FOR A FRUITFUL LIFE
1. There is a saying that says:
"If you can't measure it, you
can't manage it."
2. If you read fifteen minutes
each evening, rather than
watching television, you will
complete about fifteen books per year.
3. A goal or a decision without a deadline is merely a discussion.
It has no energy behind it. It is like a bullet with no powder in
the in the cartridge.
4. The longer you wait to get started on an assignment and the
closer the deadline approaches, the greater the stress you
experience.
5. The three keys to peak performance in achieving your goals
are commitment, completion, and closure.
GOD BLESS
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