Chapter 19: Dietary Supplements Flashcards
Define ‘dietary supplement.’
Legal definition, set by Congress included in DSHEA is board and includes products taken by mouth that contain one or more of the following “dietary ingredients:”
- Vitamin
- Mineral
- An herb or other botanical
- AA
- Dietary substance for use by humans to supplement the diet by increasing the total dietary intake, OR
- A concentrate, metabolite, constituent, extract, or combination of any ingredients above.
FDCA
Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act
DSHEA
Dietary Supplement Health Education Act (of 1994) amended the FDA authority under the FDCA
Define ‘supplement’
Means that the product is not represented for use as a conventional food or as a sole item of a meal or the diet
- Do not undergo the stringent and expensive premarket approval process required for prescription or over-the-counter drugs
Define food additives.
Means that manufacturers are exempt from the food additive premarket approval process of the FDCA.
Define CAM.
Complementary and Alternative Medicine; a group of diverse medical and healthcare systems, practices, and products that are not generally considered part of conventional medicine
- AKA Allopathic medicine
Define complementary medicine.
Refers to practices and products used together with conventional medicine.
Define alternative medicine.
Refers to systems, practices, and products that are used as a SUBSTITUTE for conventional medicine.
Define integrative medicine.
Refers to a practice that combines both conventional and CAM approaches for which there is evidence of safety and effectiveness.
Define naturopathy.
A medical system that aims to support the body’s ability to heal itself through dietary and lifestyle changes with therapies including the use of herbal supplements, massage, and joint manipulation.
Define phytotherapy.
Is the science of using plant-based medicines to prevent or treat illness.
Define nutraceutical.
Can refer to nutrients or other active food ingredients delivered in a pharmaceutical dosage form.
- Example: Vitamin C tablets
Define functional food (AND definition)
“Foods that move beyond necessity to provide additional health benefits that may reduce disease risk and/or promote optimal health.” These would include:
- Conventional foods
- Modified foods (fortified, enriched, or enhanced)
- Medical foods, AND
- Foods for special dietary use, such as infant food and weight loss food
Example: OJ, bc it has a high composition of vitamin C
Define medical food.
“Food which is formulated to be consumed or administered enterally under the supervision of a MD and which is intended for the specific dietary mgmt of a disease or condition for which distinctive nutritional requirements, based on recognized scientific principles, are established by medical evaluation”
Medical foods are exempt from both food labeling and dietary supplement labeing requirements, AKA different regulations apply.
- Include protein modulars
- Oral supplements
Define homeopathy.
- A system of medicine that originated in Europe in the late 1800s.
- Based on the principle, “principle of similars” or “like-cures-like”
- Meaning, the observation that while high doses of pharmacologically active substances cuase symptoms when administered to healthy people, those same substances when prepared to very dilute form may relieve similar symptoms in conditions resulting from different etiologies.
- Not considered dietary supplements under the legal definition of the FDCA.
- Homeopathic products premarket approval process is controlled by the Homeopathic Pharmacopeia Convention of the US.