Guest guest Posted August 21, 2006 Report Share Posted August 21, 2006 Hi Tony: About a year ago I asked (I think it was) nutritiondata.com a similar question. The answer I got back seemed to amount to the following: each of the different fat, protein and carbohydrate types (molecules) contain different amounts of chemical energy per gram. The multipliers 4 and 9 are just pretty decent overall averages. But if a food contains significant amounts of molecules the energy content of which are materially different from the averages, then its overall caloric content will be materially different from that derived using 4 or 9. They didn't provide a reference documenting this. But it certainly seems like an explanation could make sense. Rodney. > > Reference Values for Nutrition Labeling > http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/flg-7a.html > > Based on a 2000 Calorie Intake > Total Fat grams (g) 65 > Total carbohydrate grams (g) 300 > Fiber grams (g) 25 > Protein grams (g) 50 > > == > > By my calculation, the FDA reference values only add up to 1885 > Calories. Here is how I figure: > > Fat Calories = 9x65 = 586 > Carb Calories = 4x(total carbs - fiber) = 4x(300 -25) = 1100 > Protein Calories = 4x50 = 200 > Total = 1885 Calories > > It seems to me that if the FDA diet is 15%P, 30%F, 55%C with 25g of > fiber, the number of grams for 2000 Calories should be P=75 g, F=66 g, > Tot Carb = 300 g. > > Does anybody know why the official Reference values don't add up to > 2000? > > Tony > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 21, 2006 Report Share Posted August 21, 2006 Rodney, Even if the chemical energy is slightly different from 4 kcal/g for protein and carb, and 9 kcal/g for fat, this does not explain why most of the missing 115 kcal (2000-1885) are from ~25 g of protein. The only explanation that makes sense to me is that the minimum protein requirement is 0.8 g per kg of body weight, and a 150 lb person (68 kg) requires 54 g of protein which rounds to 50 g. I think that the 50 grams represents some kind of implicit average minimum.. In any case, 115 kcal is only a ~5% difference which is a small quantity of food in real life (an extra apple, half a soda, a handful of corn chips, etc.), but if those calories should be coming from protein, this difference is more serious. A low reference value of protein will guarantee that the general population will be deficient in protein even if they are meeting 100% of the USDA standard. What bothers me most is that if the government which sets the rules cannot count calories properly, how can we expect the manufacturers to do so? > > > > Reference Values for Nutrition Labeling > > http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/flg-7a.html > > > > Based on a 2000 Calorie Intake > > Total Fat grams (g) 65 > > Total carbohydrate grams (g) 300 > > Fiber grams (g) 25 > > Protein grams (g) 50 > > > > == > > > > By my calculation, the FDA reference values only add up to 1885 > > Calories. Here is how I figure: > > > > Fat Calories = 9x65 = 586 > > Carb Calories = 4x(total carbs - fiber) = 4x(300 -25) = 1100 > > Protein Calories = 4x50 = 200 > > Total = 1885 Calories > > > > It seems to me that if the FDA diet is 15%P, 30%F, 55%C with 25g of > > fiber, the number of grams for 2000 Calories should be P=75 g, F=66 > g, > > Tot Carb = 300 g. > > > > Does anybody know why the official Reference values don't add up to > > 2000? > > > > Tony > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 > > Based on a 2000 Calorie Intake > Total Fat grams (g) 65 > Total carbohydrate grams (g) 300 > Fiber grams (g) 25 > Protein grams (g) 50 > > My count shows 1985 calories, as the government figures don't make any distinction between soluble and nonsoluble fibers, so the 4 calories per gram count towards the 1985 calorie total, or rounding to 2000 as they like to do. Regards, Don White Seguin, Tx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2006 Report Share Posted August 23, 2006 Don, Dietary fiber is defined as consisting of indigestible complex carbohydrates. The fact that fiber cannot be digested means that you cannot get any calories from it. This is why you subtract the grams of fiber from the total carbohydrates to calculate the calories from carbs. It is known that microbial fermentation in the colon transforms some of the fiber into short-chain fatty acids which are absorbed by the intestines, but I have never heard that this is a significant source of calories. Tony > > > > > > Based on a 2000 Calorie Intake > > Total Fat grams (g) 65 > > Total carbohydrate grams (g) 300 > > Fiber grams (g) 25 > > Protein grams (g) 50 > > > > > My count shows 1985 calories, as the government figures don't make > any distinction between soluble and nonsoluble fibers, so the 4 > calories per gram count towards the 1985 calorie total, or rounding > to 2000 as they like to do. > > Regards, > Don White > Seguin, Tx > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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