11. Dietary supplements and functional foods
Dietary supplementation
- Definition: A manufactured product intended to supplement the diet when taken by mouth as a pill, capsule, tablet or liquid
- Can provide natural or synthetic nutrients
- $37 billion industry in 2015
- 50% of Americans take dietary supplements
- Common types
- Multivitamins
- Sport nutrition supplements
- Calcium
- B-vitamins
- Vitamin C
- Glucosamine
- Fish oil
- Collagen
- Ginseng
- Glucosamine
- Probiotic
- Folic acid
- Medically indicated uses for dietary supplementation
- Changing diet to treat nutrient deficiencies is always preferred to dietary supplementation
- Folic acid in pregnancy
- Fish oil (omega-3 fatty acids have cardioprotective effect)
- In diseases with malabsorption (Crohn’s, chronic pancreatitis)
- Supplementing nutrients in patients who are not nutrient deficient has no effect!
- A balanced diet eliminates the need for dietary supplement! (which it’s required by law to be written on the nutritional label)
- Dietary supplements can’t make up for poor eating habits
- Food safety
- Most supplements are safe even in case of overdose, but some (like fat-soluble nutrients) are not
- Vitamin K supplementation can impair the function of blood thinners
- St. John’s wort speeds up the metabolism of many drugs, decreasing their effectiveness
- Antioxidants can reduce the effectiveness of chemotherapy
- Overdosing iron causes severe intestinal bleeding
- Overdosing vitamin A can cause birth defects
Functional foods
- Definition: Foods that have a potentially positive effect on health beyond providing nutrition
- Claimed to have health-promoting or disease-preventing effects
- Fruits and vegetables are functional foods as they contain molecules that are not nutrients but still beneficial
- Includes
- Fortified foods – foods with nutrients added to them
- Omega-3 added to butter
- Vitamin D added to milk
- Iodine added to salt
- Probiotics added to yoghurt
- Phytonutrients/phytochemicals = Molecules in fruits and vegetables that are not nutrients or vitamins
- Lycopene
- Anthocyanin
- β-carotene
- Lutein
- Wild fish
- Contains omega-3 fats
- Grains
- Contain dietary fibre
- Fortified foods – foods with nutrients added to them