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        | What are the six classes of Nutrients? |  | Definition 
 
        | Carbohydrates, Lipids(fats), Proteins, Vitamins, Minerals, and Water |  | 
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        | What nutrients are Organic (cantain carbon)? |  | Definition 
 
        | Carbohydrates, Lipids, Proteins, and Vitamins |  | 
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        | What nutrients are Inorganic (no carbon)? |  | Definition 
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        | What nutrients produce ATP? |  | Definition 
 
        | Carbohydrates, Lipids, Protiens |  | 
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        | What nutrients produce no ATP? |  | Definition 
 
        | Vitamins, Minerals, and Water |  | 
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        | What kind of nutrients can not be made in the body and we must get them from food? |  | Definition 
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        | What kind of nutrients can be made in the body? |  | Definition 
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        | Major strutural building blocks |  | Definition 
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        | Energy storage; synthesis and repair of cell parts. |  | Definition 
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        | Solvent; lubricant; medim for transport and temperature regulation. |  | Definition 
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        | Enable chemical reactions in the body. |  | Definition 
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        | Aid enzyme function; electrical balance; generate nerve impulses; bone structure. |  | Definition 
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        | What is the energy from Carbs, lipids, and proteins measure in? |  | Definition 
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        | 1g carbohydrate provides how many kcal for energy? |  | Definition 
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        | 1g of protein provides how many kcal for energy? |  | Definition 
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        | 1g of lipid provides how many kcal for energy? |  | Definition 
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        | 1g of alcohol provides how many kcal for energy? |  | Definition 
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        | Lower energy density means... |  | Definition 
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        | Higher energy density means... |  | Definition 
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        | How many calories are in 1 pound of fat? |  | Definition 
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        | What nutrient provides glucose? |  | Definition 
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        | What nutrient is a source of energy during rest and sleep? |  | Definition 
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        | What nutrient is the primary source of tisues in muscle, bones, and skin; part of neurotransmitters, the immune system, and enzymes? |  | Definition 
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        | Type of assessment used for Height, weight, and BMI |  | Definition 
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        | Type of assessment used on blood, urine, and feces |  | Definition 
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        | Type of assessment used when observing hair, fingernails, skin, lips, mouth, muscle, joints, overall appearance |  | Definition 
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        | Type of assessment used when getting diet history, diet record, food frequency questionnaire, 24-hour dietary recall. |  | Definition 
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        | Protein, sugar, sodium, and satturated fat |  | 
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        | Americans eat to little... |  | Definition 
 
        | fiber, vitamin A & E, and calcium...due to inadequate consumption of fruits and vegetables |  | 
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        | ______-diet provides all the essential nutrients, fiber, and energy. |  | Definition 
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        | ______-diet provides the correct proprtion of nutrients, not eating too much of one type of food. |  | Definition 
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        | _______-diet contains a mixture of different food groups and foods with each. |  | Definition 
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        | _______-diet providdes reasonable but not excessive amounts or foods an nutrients. |  | Definition 
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        | Foods high in in nutrients and low in calories are called |  | Definition 
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        | Foods that are high in calories but low in weight are called |  | Definition 
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        | Foods that are low in calories but are high in weight are called |  | Definition 
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        | A woman fist represents a portion of |  | Definition 
 
        | 1 cup of pasta or vegetables |  | 
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        | A woman's palm is approximately |  | Definition 
 
        | 3 onces of cooked meat, fish, or chicken |  | 
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        | low in salt and high in potassium |  | 
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        | Which types of fat should you choose? |  | Definition 
 
        | monounsaturated and polyunsaturated |  | 
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        | USDA assigns foods to 5 major groups.  What are they? |  | Definition 
 
        | Fruits, vegetables, grains, meat and legumes, and milk |  | 
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        | Have nutrients added back |  | Definition 
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        | Have nutrients added that were not part of the original food. |  | Definition 
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        | What percentage of your grains should be whole grains? |  | Definition 
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        | What percentage of your diet should be carbohydrates? |  | Definition 
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        | What percentage of your diet should be lipids? |  | Definition 
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        | What percentage of your diet should be proteins? |  | Definition 
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        | Ingredients on food packages are listed in |  | Definition 
 
        | descending order by weight |  | 
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        | Foods are considered to be high in a nutrient if the daily value is |  | Definition 
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        | Foods are considered to be low in that nutrient if the DV is |  | Definition 
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        | "More", "Added", "Extra", or "Plus" means |  | Definition 
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        | Food contains less than 10g of fat, 4.5g or less of saturated fat, and less 95mg of cholesterol |  | 
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        | 5g of fat, less than 2g of saturated fat. |  | 
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        | Low in fat and saturated fat; limited in cholesterol content; sodium content can't exceed 360mg; contains 10% of the DV of one or more of vitamins and C, iron, calcium, protein, or fiber |  | 
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        | Gastrointestinal Tract major organs |  | Definition 
 
        | mouth, esophagus, stomach, small & large intestine |  | 
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        | (GI) tract accessory ograns |  | Definition 
 
        | liver, pancreas, gallbladder |  | 
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        | Mouth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestin, rectum, and anus |  | 
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        | Breakdown of compounds using water is called |  | Definition 
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        | Organic catalysts that increase the rate of reaction are called |  | Definition 
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        | Specific nutrients that enzyme works on are called |  | Definition 
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        | When water is added to a protein is breaks down into |  | Definition 
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        | When water is added to a carbohydrate is breaks down to |  | Definition 
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        | Water is added to lipid the glycerol breaks down into |  | Definition 
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        | Digestion in the mouth involves |  | Definition 
 
        | Mastification (chewing), saliva, stimualtion of taste buds, and swallowing. |  | 
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        | What contains the enzyme amylase, which begins the digestion of carbohydrates? |  | Definition 
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        | During swallowing what closes the larynx/trachea to the lungs? |  | Definition 
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        | After swallowing the food is called a |  | Definition 
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        | The tube that leads from the mouth to the stomach with upper and lower sphincter muscles is called |  | Definition 
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        | The muscular contractions that propel the food forward throught the GI tract is called |  | Definition 
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        | What breaks down food into smaller pieces through back and forth movement? |  | Definition 
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        | Digestion of proteins begins in the |  | Definition 
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        | HCI activates what enzyme in the stomach? |  | Definition 
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        | What secretes mucus which protects the stomach lining from the hydrochloric acid |  | Definition 
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        | What is the semi-liquid mass leaving the stomach called |  | Definition 
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        | What does enzymes and bicarbonate do regaurding pH? |  | Definition 
 
        | Make neurtal so small intestine does not get hurt. |  | 
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        | Where does digestion and absorption of most nutrients occur |  | Definition 
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        | What is the first part of the small intestine that receives pancreatic enzymes, bicarbonate, and bile? |  | Definition 
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        | Where does digestion of lipids begin? |  | Definition 
 
        | In the duodenum of the small intestine |  | 
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        | Emulsifies lipids (harshly breaks down) |  | 
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        | Where is bile produced and then stores? |  | Definition 
 
        | Produced in the liver and stored in the gallbladder |  | 
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        | Cholesterol, bile salts, and pigments |  | 
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        | What increases the surface area for absorption of nutrients in the small intestine? |  | Definition 
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        | Process of moving nutrients from the GI tract into the bloodstream is called |  | Definition 
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        | What required energy to move molecules (nutrients) from a low to a high concentration |  | Definition 
 
        | Active Transport ex: glucose and amino acids |  | 
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        | Requires no energy to move molecules from a high to a low concentration |  | Definition 
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        | When molecules move directly through, this is called? |  | Definition 
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        | What is it called when a protein carrier helps molecules across ex: fructose |  | Definition 
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        | Nutrients that go to the circulatory system, liver, and then to the cells are called |  | Definition 
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        | Nutrients that go to the lymphatic system, bypass the liver at first, circulatory system, and then to the body cells are called |  | Definition 
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        | Absorbs water and the eletrolytes sodium, potassium, and chloride. |  | Definition 
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        | Passes feces to the rectum |  | Definition 
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        | First organ to receive absorbed nutrients, carbohydrate metabolism, produces protiens, manufactures bile, alcohol metabolism, removes toxins, and degrades excess hormones. |  | Definition 
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        | Stores bile, releases bile into small intestine for lipid digestion. |  | Definition 
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        | Releases hormones to maintain blood glucose levels, secretes digestive enzymes into the small intestine. |  | Definition 
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        | Erosion of the stomach or duodenum lining caused by the bacteria helicobacter pylori |  | Definition 
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        | Caused by thick bile, high in cholesterol and low in bile acids, that forms crystal and hardened sludge over time. |  | Definition 
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        | A gennetic disorder that causes damage to the villi of the small intestine when gluten food are consumed leading to the malabsorption of nutrients |  | Definition 
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        | Ulcers that occur through out the GI tract is called |  | Definition 
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