Are you eating your fiber? I know people don't always like it....
Dietary Fiber requirements
The
RDAs for fiber for healthy adults are 38gm/day for males 19-50 years old
and 25 gm/day for females 19-50 years old. The RDA for fiber decreases
with age. Males age 51 years and older need 30 gm/day; females age 51
years and older need 21 mg/day. The requirement for fiber varies
somewhat among individuals. The average American eats about 15 grams of
fiber a day - too little to meet the RDA. Get enough to feel good!!!!
Dietary Fiber Facts
What happens when Dietary Fiber intake is too high?
There
are no Tolerable Upper Intake Levels for fiber. Because fiber is bulky,
excess eating is thought to be self-limiting. At very high intakes,
fiber can combine with certain vitamins and minerals to make them
unavailable to the body in a chemical process called "chelation".
However, if you eat a balanced diet, the chelating effect is not great
enough to cause nutrient deficiencies. Even vegetarians, whose diets
are very high in fiber, have normal vitamin and mineral levels. Fibers
do carry water out of the body, which could be dehydrating. It is
important to drink extra fluids to help fiber work. Should be drinking at least 1/2 your body weight in ounces of water per Day.
What happens when Dietary Fiber intake is too low?
The
short-term effect of a low fiber diet is usually constipation. A high
fiber diet prevents constipation and hemorrhoids. It stimulates the
muscles of the digestive track to retain their tone. Over the
long-term, a low fiber diet may increase the risk of heart disease,
stroke, diabetes, and gastrointestinal conditions(IBS). When increasing
fiber intake, it is best to do it gradually over several weeks to
prevent stomach aches, bloating, gas, and diarrhea.
Which foods are high in Dietary Fiber?
High fiber foods are unrefined grains, like whole wheat, bran, corn, oats, and brown rice, dried beans (black beans, black-eyed peas, chickpeas, etc.), lentils, split peas and whole dried peas, and fibrous fruits and vegetables, like berries, prunes, dried fruits, apples, broccoli, green, and potatoes with skins. "Purified fiber" may also be taken as a supplement. Oat bran, wheat bran, psyllium husk powder, and pectin are examples of purified fibers. There should be no need for purified fibers if the diet contains a wide variety of high fiber foods VISIT me at Facebook <Facebook/NUTRIE4U> or at my site for more infomration on my Nutrie products !!!
http:// www.kristine.automatic.body.com



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