Functional Foods The University of Georgia Cooperative Extension Service.

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Functional Foods The University of Georgia Cooperative Extension Service

Transcript of Functional Foods The University of Georgia Cooperative Extension Service.

Functional Foods

The University of Georgia Cooperative Extension Service

Functional Foods Outline

• What are functional foods?

• What do we get from them?

• Which foods are functional foods?

• How to use them

Functional Foods

• Foods that provide health benefits beyond basic nutrition.

Functional foods may be:

• Whole Foods

• Enriched Foods

• Fortified Foods

• Enhanced Foods

In Whole FoodsBeta-carotene

Lycopene

Omega-3 fatty acids

Flavonoids

Phenols

Isoflavones

All are Phytochemicals

Class/Components Examples of Food Source

Potential Benefit

Lycopene Tomatoes & watermelon

Reduces risk of some cancers

Lutein &

Zeaxanthin

Kale, collards, spinach, corn, eggs

Helps maintain healthy vision

Whole grains Cereal grains Reduce risk for CHD and cancer

Beta-carotene Carrots, many fruits

Helps antioxidant defenses

Insoluble Fiber Wheat Bran Maintains a healthy GI tract

Enriched Foods• Enriched foods have

nutrients added back. • Grain enrichment

nutrients include:– Iron– Thiamin– Riboflavin– Niacin– Folate

Fortified Foods• Fortified foods: have

nutrients added that may not have been present in the original food.

• Examples:– Milk & margarine: vitamin A

– Orange Juice: calcium

– Some breakfast cereals

Enhanced Foods

• Foods that have ingredients added that are not vitamins and minerals

• Examples – – Soup and teas with added herbs– Cereal with added psyllium – Margarine with added plant sterol/stanol esters

Supplementary Products

• These can be:– Milk or juice based drinks– Fortified desserts– Energy and/or protein supplements– Vitamin or mineral supplements

FDA Approved Food Claims

• Calcium and osteoporosis

• Sodium and high blood pressure

• Saturated fat and cholesterol and cardiovascular disease

• Fiber in grains, fruits and vegetables and heart disease and cancer

• Fruits and vegetables and cancer

• Folate and neural tube defects in babies

Industry Requested Food Claims

• Sugar alcohols and dental decay

• Oats and heart disease• Foods containing

psyllium fiber and heart disease

• Soy protein and heart disease

• Plant sterol/stanol esters and heart disease

Not all claims are approved by the FDA

• May just describe a function or structure of a food or an ingredient – “Vitamin E is an antioxidant.”

• Cannot make a claim about preventing or controlling a disease

• On label, will say not approved by FDA.

Functional Foods are Not Magic

• Can even be dangerous– Cause allergies– Drug interactions– Drowsiness– Unknown amount and effect

• Not a substitute for real food• Not superior to a balanced diet or regular

medical treatment

Summary

• Functional foods are simply foods that have added nutritional benefits.

• To be safe, only use function foods that have FDA approved claims.

• Do not use functional foods to replace a balanced diet or regular medical treatment.

True or False?

• All functional foods are approved by the FDA.

• Functional foods can be natural and fortified foods.

• It is OK to replace prescribed medicines with functional foods.