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List of illnesses caused by poor nutrition
Many diseases in humans are directly or indirectly caused by improper eating habits and malnutrition. These include, but are not limited to, deficiency diseases, caused by a lack of essential nutrients.
Additionally, several diseases are directly or indirectly impacted by dietary habits, and require very close attention to the nutrient content of food.
Overnutrition (eating too much)
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Main article: Overnutrition
Food
- See also: Overeating
Calories
Vitamins
Microminerals and Macrominerals
Deficiencies (eating too little)
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Main article: Malnutrition
Proteins/fats/carbohydrates
- protein-energy malnutrition
Vitamin
- See also: avitaminosis, and the table of deficiency diseases at human vitamins
Microminerals and Macrominerals
Foot notes
- ^ "Malnutrition Is Cheating Its Survivors, and Africa’s Future" article in the New York Times by Michael Wines, December 28, 2006
- ^ Grant WB, Holick MF (2005). "Benefits and requirements of vitamin D for optimal health: a review". Altern Med Rev 10 (2): 94-111. PMID 15989379.
See also
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Nutritional pathology (E40-68, 260-269) |
| Malnutrition |
Kwashiorkor - Marasmus |
| Other underconsumption |
B vitamins: B1: Beriberi/Wernicke's encephalopathy, B2: Ariboflavinosis, B3: Pellagra, B6: Pyridoxine deficiency, B7: Biotin deficiency, B9: Folate deficiency, B12: Vitamin B12 deficiency
other vitamins: A: Vitamin A deficiency/Bitot's spots, C: Scurvy, D: Rickets/Osteomalacia
mineral: Zinc deficiency - Iron deficiency, Magnesium deficiency - Chromium deficiency |
| Hyperalimentation |
Obesity - Hypervitaminosis A - Hypervitaminosis D |
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "List_of_illnesses_caused_by_poor_nutrition". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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