Abstract

In order to fully exploit the nutrient density concept, thorough understanding of the biological activity of single nutrients in their interaction with other nutrients and food components from whole foods is important. This review provides a narrative overview of recent insights into nutrient bioavailability from complex foods in humans, highlighting synergistic and antagonistic processes among food components for two different food groups, i.e., dairy, and vegetables and fruits. For dairy, bioavailability of vitamins A, B2, B12 and K, calcium, phosphorous, magnesium, zinc and iodine are discussed, whereas bioavailability of pro-vitamin A, folate, vitamin C and K, potassium, calcium, magnesium and iron are discussed for vegetables and fruits. Although the bioavailability of some nutrients is fairly well-understood, for other nutrients the scientific understanding of uptake, absorption, and bioavailability in humans is still at a nascent stage. Understanding the absorption and bioavailability of nutrients from whole foods in interaction with food components that influence these processes will help to come to individual diet scores that better reflect absorbable nutrient intake in epidemiologic studies that relate dietary intake to health outcomes. Moreover, such knowledge may help in the design of foods, meals, and diets that aid in the supply of bioavailable nutrients to specific target groups.

Highlights

  • The nutritional sciences are built on the study of single nutrients or food components in relation to health outcomes

  • The main objective of this review is to provide an overview of insights into nutrient bioavailability from complex foods in humans, thereby highlighting the current state of knowledge on synergistic and antagonistic processes among food components

  • Both milk as well as vegetables and fruits are nutrientdense foods that provide a myriad of nutrients which impact human metabolism and health

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

The nutritional sciences are built on the study of single nutrients or food components in relation to health outcomes. The study of absorption and bioavailability of nutrients from foods in humans requires sophisticated methods that take into account endogenous nutrient losses through the enterohepatic circulation as well as incorporation of nutrients into storage tissue. Use of isotopes, both radioisotopes and stable isotopes, have greatly improved accuracy and precision of in vivo nutrient bioavailability studies, either as a single nutrient or as part of a food, meal, or dietary pattern [2]. Understanding of these processes will help to better predict the true nutrient value of foods and to incorporate this information into diet scores in the future

MILK AND DAIRY FOODS
DAIRY AS A SOURCE OF CALCIUM
Dairy food component
DAIRY AS A SOURCE OF OTHER NUTRIENTS
Binding to casein and whey High dosing peptides Lactose
Minerals and Trace Elements
VEGETABLES AND FRUITS
Vitamin C Lactic fermentation
VEGETABLES AND FRUIT AS SOURCES OF NUTRIENTS
Conversion factora
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call