Page:EB1911 - Volume 08.djvu/235

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218
DIETETICS
  

expressed in calories, one calory being the amount of heat necessary to raise the temperature of one kilogram of water one degree centigrade. But it is to be observed that this unit is employed simply from convenience, and without implication as to what extent the energy of food is converted into heat in the body. The unit employed in the measurement of some other form of energy might be used instead, as, for example, the foot-ton, which represents the amount of energy necessary to raise one ton through one foot.

Table III.Estimates of Heats of Combustion and of Fuel Value
of Nutrients in Ordinary Mixed Diet.

Nutrients. Heat of
Combustion. 
Fuel Value. 
Calories. Calories.
One gram of protein 5·65 4·05
One gram of fats 9·40 8·93
One gram of carbohydrates 4·15 4·03

The amount of energy which a given quantity of food will produce on complete oxidation outside the body, however, is greater than that which the body will actually derive from it. In the first place, as previously shown, part of the food will not be digested and absorbed. In the second place, the nitrogenous compounds absorbed are not completely oxidized in the body, the residuum being excreted in the urine as urea and other bodies that are capable of further oxidation in the calorimeter. The total heat of combustion of the food eaten must therefore be diminished by the heat of combustion of the oxidizable material rejected by the body, to find what amount of energy is actually available to the organism for the production of work and heat. The amount thus determined is commonly known as the fuel value of food.

Rubner’s[1] commonly quoted estimates for the fuel value of the nutrients of mixed diet are,—for protein and carbohydrates 4·1, and for fats 9·3 calories per gram. According to the method of deduction, however, these factors were more applicable to digested than to total nutrients. Atwater[2] and associates have deduced, from data much more extensive than those available to Rubner, factors for total nutrients somewhat lower than these, as shown in Table III. These estimates seem to represent the best average factors at present available, but are subject to revision as knowledge is extended.


Table IV.Quantities of Available Nutrients and Energy in Daily Food Consumption of Persons in
Different Circumstances
.

  Number of
Studies.
Nutrients and Energy per Man per Day.
Protein. Fat. Carbo-
hydrates.
Fuel Value.
Persons with Active Work.   Grams. Grams. Grams. Calories.
English royal engineers  1 132  79 612 3835
Prussian machinists  1 129 107 657 4265
Swedish mechanics  5 174 105 693 4590
Bavarian lumbermen  3 120 277 702 6015
American lumbermen  5 155 327 804 6745
Japanese rice cleaner  1 103  11 917 4415
Japanese jinrikshaw runner  1 137  22 1010 5050
Chinese farm labourers in California  1 132  90 621 3980
American athletes 19 178 192 525 4740
American working-men’s families 13 156 226 694 5650
Persons with Ordinary Work.
Bavarian mechanics 11 112  32 553 3060
Bavarian farm labourers  5 126  52 526 3200
Russian peasants .. 119  31 571 3155
Prussian prisoners  1 117  28 620 3320
Swedish mechanics  6 123  75 507 3325
American working-men’s families 69 105 135 426 3480
Persons with Light Work.        
American artisans’ families 21  93 107 358 2880
English tailors (prisoners)  1 121  37 509 2970
German shoemakers  1  99  73 367 2629
Japanese prisoners  1  43  6 444 2110
Professional and Business Men.          
Japanese professional men 13  75  15 408 2190
Japanese students  8  85  18 537 2800
Japanese military cadets 11  98  20 611 3185
German physicians  2 121  90 317 2685
Swedish medical students  5 117 108 291 2725
Danish physicians  1 124 133 242 2790
American professional and business men and students  51  98 125 411 3285
Persons with Little or no Exercise.          
Prussian prisoners  2  90  27 427 2400
Japanese prisoners  1  36  6 360 1725
Inmates of home for aged—Germany  1  85  43 322 2097
Inmates of hospitals for insane—America 49  80  86 353 2590
Persons in Destitute Circumstances.          
Prussian working people 13  63  43 372 2215
Italian mechanics  5  70  36 384 2225
American working-men’s families 11  69  75 263 2085
  1. Ztschr. Biol. 21 (1885), p. 377.
  2. Connecticut (Storrs) Agricultural Experiment Station Report (1899), 73.