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Deficiency Diseases Information

Nutritional Diseases are diseases in humans that are directly or indirectly caused by a lack of essential nutrients in the diet. Nutritional diseases are commonly associated with chronic malnutrition. Additionally, conditions such as obesity from overeating can also cause, or contribute to, serious health problems. Excessive intake of some nutrients can cause acute poisoning.

Contents

Overnutrition

Main article: Overnutrition

Metabolic

Obesity is caused by consuming too many calories compared to the amount of exercise the body is performing, causing a distorted energy balance. It can lead to diseases such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Obesity is a condition in which the natural energy reserve, stored in the fatty tissue of humans and other mammals, is increased to a point where it is associated with certain health conditions or increased mortality.

The low-cost food that is generally affordable to the poor in affluent nations is low in nutritional value and high in fats, sugars and additives. In rich countries, therefore, obesity is oftentimes a sign of poverty and malnutrition while in poorer countries obesity is more associated with wealth and good nutrition. Other non-nutritional causes for unhealthy obesity included: sleep deprivation, stress, lack of exercise, and heredity.

Acute overeating can also be a symptom of an eating disorder.

Goitrogenic foods can cause goitres by interfering with iodine uptake.

Vitamins and micronutrients

Vitamin poisoning is the condition of overly high storage levels of vitamins, which can lead to toxic symptoms. The medical names of the different conditions are derived from the vitamin involved: an excess of vitamin A, for example, is called "hypervitaminosis A".

Iron overload disorders are diseases caused by the overaccumulation of iron in the body. Organs commonly affected are the liver, heart and endocrine glands.

Deficiencies

Main article: Malnutrition Disability-adjusted life year for nutritional deficiencies per 100,000 inhabitants in 2002. Nutritional deficiencies included: protein-energy malnutrition, iodine deficiency, vitamin A deficiency, and iron deficiency anaemia.[1] no data less than 150 150-300 300-450 450-600 600-750 750-900 900-1050 1050-1200 1200-1350 1350-1500 1500-1750 more than 1750

Proteins/fats/carbohydrates

Dietary vitamins and minerals

Complex disorders

In some cases, eating too much of one thing can induce an apparent deficiency of something else. A common example occurs when livestock eat locoweed: locoweed contains a toxin that inhibits enzymes, simulating a deficiency of the enzymes.

Foot notes

  1. ^ "Mortality and Burden of Disease Estimates for WHO Member States in 2002" (xls). World Health Organization. 2002. http://www.who.int/entity/healthinfo/statistics/bodgbddeathdalyestimates.xls.
  2. ^ "Malnutrition Is Cheating Its Survivors, and Africa’s Future" article in the New York Times by Michael Wines, December 28, 2006

See also

Pathology: Medical conditions and ICD code
(Disease / Disorder / Illness, Syndrome / Sequence, Symptom / Sign, Injury, etc.)
(A/B, 001-139) Infectious disease/Infection: Bacterial disease (G+, G-) · Virus disease · Parasitic disease (Protozoan infection, Helminthiasis, Ectoparasitic infestation) · Mycosis · Zoonosis
(C/D, 140-239 & 280-289)
Cancer (C00-D48, 140-239) Tumor
Myeloid hematologic (D50-D77, 280-289) Anemia · Coagulopathy
Lymphoid immune (D80-D89, 279) Immunodeficiency · Immunoproliferative disorder · Hypersensitivity
(E, 240-278) Endocrine disease · Nutrition disorder · Inborn error of metabolism
(F, 290-319) Mental disorder
(G, 320-359) Nervous system disease (CNS, PNS) · Neuromuscular disease
(H, 360-389) Eye disease · Ear disease
(I, 390-459) Cardiovascular disease (Heart disease, Vascular disease)
(J, 460-519) Respiratory disease (Obstructive lung disease, Restrictive lung disease, Pneumonia)
(K, 520-579) Stomatognathic disease (Tooth disease) · Digestive disease (Esophageal, Stomach, Enteropathy, Liver, Pancreatic)
(L, 680-709) Skin disease · skin appendages (Nail disease, Hair disease, Sweat gland disease)
(M, 710-739) Musculoskeletal disorders: Myopathy · Arthropathy · Osteochondropathy (Osteopathy, Chondropathy)
(N, 580-629) Urologic disease (Nephropathy, Urinary bladder disease) · Male genital disease · Breast disease · Female genital disease
(O, 630-679) Complications of pregnancy · Obstetric labor complication · Puerperal disorder
(P, 760-779) Fetal disease
(Q, 740-759) Congenital disorder (Congenital abnormality)
(R, 780-799) Syndromes · Medical signs (Eponymous)
(S/T, 800-999) Bone fracture · Joint dislocation · Sprain · Strain · Subluxation · Head injury · Chest trauma · Poisoning
Nutrition disorders (E40-68, 260-269)
Hypoalimentation/ malnutrition
Protein-energy malnutrition Kwashiorkor · Marasmus · Catabolysis
Avitaminosis
B vitamins B1: Beriberi/Wernicke's encephalopathy (Thiamine deficiency) · B2: Ariboflavinosis · B3: Pellagra (Niacin deficiency) · B6: Pyridoxine deficiency · B7: Biotin deficiency · B9: Folate deficiency · B12: Vitamn B12 deficiency
Other vitamins A: Vitamin A deficiency/Bitot's spots · C: Scurvy · D: Hypovitaminosis D/Rickets/Osteomalacia · E: Vitamin E deficiency · K: Vitamin K deficiency
Mineral deficiency Zinc · Iron · Magnesium · Chromium · Selenium (Keshan disease) · Manganese · Molybdenum · Copper · Calcium · Potassium
Hyperalimentation
Overweight · Obesity Childhood obesity · Obesity hypoventilation syndrome · Abdominal obesity
Vitamin poisoning Hypervitaminosis A · Hypervitaminosis D · Hypervitaminosis E
Mineral overload see inborn errors of metal metabolism, toxicity

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Categories: Dietetics | Malnutrition | Lists of diseases

 

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