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Showing posts with label nutrients. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nutrients. Show all posts

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Key Nutrients

Hey guys,
I am always amazed that people do not know the functions that their food items (& nutrients within those items) play. That said, many adults don't even know what nutrients are derived from foods they're eating, despite most being clearly labeled.
Below is a list of our key nutrients and the main function that they perform.

Protein – repair & growth of tissue (including MUSCLE!)
Carbohydrate – primary energy source
Fat – secondary energy source
Vitamins & Minerals – regulate metabolic processes.
Water – transportation of other nutrients

Please visit www.GymProfessor.com for more information on nutrients.

All the best,
GP
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Author of the bestseller Gym Workouts - Maps to Success
Inventor of Gym Professor Shuffle free gym workout app.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Key Nutrients & Their Functions

I, GP, am always amazed that people do not know the functions that their food items (& nutrients within those items) play. That said, many adults don't even know what nutrients are derived from foods they're eating, despite most being clearly labeled. Below is a list of our key nutrients and the main function that they perform. Click on each for more in-depth information.

Protein – repair & growth of tissue
Carbohydrate – primary energy source
Fat – secondary energy source
Vitamins & Minerals – regulate metabolic processes.
Water – transportation of other nutrients

Best regards,

GP

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Vitamins

Vitamins help to regulate our metabolic processes. Vitamins were named by a Polish biochemist called Kazimierz Funk (that's a cool name!). Vitamins being the abbreviation of vita amines - 'vita' meaning life in Latin and 'amin' as he believed them to be amines (an organic compound that contains a basic nitrogen atom with a lone pair), which unfortunately we now know to be untrue (perhaps a better name would've been Funksters). Anyway, as touched upon with minerals, a lack of vitamins through our dietary sources can result in related problems. An extreme example of the effects of a prolonged lack of certain vitamins within our diet, is the disease Scurvy, which is due to a deficiency of vitamin C. Scurvy was a common disease with seafarers of old with limited food sources.

Fat-soluble vitamins - A, D, E & K - are able to be stored in the body, whereas water-soluble vitamins - B & C - are not.


To find out more about the following, follow this blog or visit the Gym Professor website.


Vitamin A (Retinol)

Vitamin B Complex

Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid)

Vitamin D (Calciferol)

Vitamin E (Tocopherol)

Vitamin K

Choline & Inositol

PABA