Teachers: Macronutrient Math

Get the Nutrition Facts with Macronutrient Math

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Section 4 explains macronutrients and how they are broken down through the process of digestion. Students will have a chance to practice reading labels and figuring out calories from different types of macronutrients using an interactive calculator. This section explains how carbohydrate, a macronutrient, turns into glucose and affects the role of sugar in a healthy diet.

What Are Macronutrients?

Components of food that provide calories are macronutrients. These include fat, protein, and carbohydrate. Although alcohol also provides calories it is not considered a macronutrient because alcohol should not be a large part of caloric intake.

Fats

Fat provides nine calories per gram; protein and carbohydrate provides four calories per gram.

Dietary fat provides more than double the calories provided by carbohydrate and protein. Each gram of fat provides nine calories, and carbohydrates and protein four calories per gram.

The dietary guidelines for Americans recommend limiting saturated fat to 10% of total calories. The mixed dishes food category is the major source of saturated fats in the United States, with 35% of all saturated fats coming from mixed dishes, especially those dishes containing cheese, meat, or both. These include burgers, sandwiches, and tacos; pizza; rice, pasta, and grain dishes; and meat, poultry, and seafood dishes. The other food categories that provide the most saturated fats in current diets are snacks and sweets, protein foods, and dairy products.

Trans fats should be avoided. Trans fats can be found in many processed foods such as fried foods like doughnuts; and some baked goods including cakes, pie crusts, biscuits, frozen pizza, cookies, crackers; and stick margarines and other spreads. You can find  the trans fats amount by looking at the Nutrition Facts panel. However, products can be listed as “0 grams of trans fats” if they contain 0 grams to less than 0.5 grams of trans fat per serving. You can also identify trans fats in foods by reading the ingredient lists and looking for “partially hydrogenated oils.”

Protein

Americans consume 15-20 percent of their energy in the form of proteins. This amount is not an issue for people with diabetes who have no renal impairment. However, when the kidney function is impaired, dietary protein restriction might be recommended. The source of protein does not affect the kidney function. Thus, a healthy diet should include plant derived and animal derived proteins, choosing lean/low fat sources whenever possible.

Carbohydrates

The recommended range for carbohydrate intake is between 45% to 65% of the total caloric intake. Carbohydrate is an important source of energy and nutrients and restricting carbohydrate intake to less than 130 grams per day is not recommended because of the absolute requirement for glucose by the brain. The American Diabetes Association recommends including carbohydrates from fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes, and low-fat dairy to provide variety and nutrients. To achieve optimal blood glucose levels, a consistent carbohydrate intake at meals and snacks from day to day is necessary. In those with diabetes who take insulin, the insulin from injections and pumps should be matched to the carbohydrate intake.

Most food contains all three macronutrients.

The exception to this includes foods that are all fat, such as margarine, oils, butter; and foods that are all carbohydrate, such as sugar, syrup, hard candy. Foods that are mostly protein contain some fat as well, if they are from an animal source (i.e., chicken), or some carbohydrate as well, if they are from a vegetable source (i.e. legumes).

A review is given of how digested food turns into glucose. The primary source of glucose is carbohydrates. If a carbohydrate food is eaten with a fat or protein, for instance peanut butter (protein and fat) with a cracker (carbohydrate), the blood glucose rise is slowed down.

Is Sugar Bad?

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Sugar is a carbohydrate much like other carbohydrates. Sugar makes foods taste sweet, and many prefer the taste over non-sweet foods. Sugar has 4 calories per gram, just like other carbohydrates.

Sugar has no other vitamins or minerals, and so is considered "empty calories." Adding empty calories makes the food it is added to a more calorie-dense food. To help maintain calorie balance, added sugars should be eaten in moderation.

According to the Institute of Medicine, added sugars are those added to foods during processing or preparation. Added sugars include white sugar, brown sugar, raw sugar, corn syrup, corn-syrup solids, high-fructose corn syrup, malt syrup, maple syrup, pancake syrup, fructose sweetener, liquid fructose, honey, molasses, anhydrous dextrose, and crystal dextrose.

Added sugars do not include naturally occurring sugars such as lactose in milk or fructose in fruits. The foods most often consumed with added sugars are soft drinks, cakes, cookies, pies, fruitades, fruit punch, dairy desserts, and candy (USDA/HHS, 2000). Added sugars should be limited for a healthy diet.

Those with diabetes do not have to avoid foods with sugar any more than people without diabetes. However, they need to include the calories in their daily meal plan, and balance the calories eaten with the calories expended in exercise the same as everyone else.

Read the Nutrition Facts Labels

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Reading a food label helps to keep a check on calories and nutrients eaten every day.

Serving size and servings per container

The food label should be followed starting from the top by looking at the serving size and servings per container. The serving sizes are given in standardized units such as cups and pieces and followed by metric units (number of grams). Servings per container indicate how many servings the package contains. For example, this package of macaroni and cheese contains two servings.

Calories: The calorie section of the food label helps a person to manage weight. The portion amount determines caloric intake. For instance, if a person consumes a whole package of macaroni and cheese, then 500 calories have been consumed. The calories from fat indicate how many calories are coming from fats. In this package, almost half the calories are coming from fats.

General Guide to Calories

  • 40 calories is low
  • 100 calories is moderate
  • 400 calories or more is high

Limit These Nutrients

The nutrients listed in yellow which include total fat, cholesterol and sodium should be limited because Americans consume too much of them. Eating too much fat, saturated fat, trans fat, cholesterol, or sodium may increase your risk of certain chronic diseases, like heart disease, some cancers, or high blood pressure.

Percent Daily Values (% DV)

The percent daily values are based on the recommendations for key nutrients only for a 2000 calorie diet. These percent daily values can be followed even if the person consumes more or less than 2000 calories. A quick guide for following the percent daily value is that 5%DV or less is low and 20%DV or more is high. The %DV column doesn't add up vertically to 100%. Instead each nutrient is based on 100% of the daily requirements for that nutrient (for a 2,000 calorie diet).

Supplemental Activities: Have food labels for students. Have them find the food labels that have particular features, such as lowest in fat, highest in calcium.