English edit

Etymology edit

super- +‎ nutrition

Noun edit

supernutrition (uncountable)

  1. The presence of excessive quantities of nutrients, especially such as leads to hypertrophy or to excessive growth.
    • 1866, Samuel David Gross, A System of Surgery:
      The sarcomatous testicle, for example, as it was formerly called, in conformity with the nomenclature of the English surgeon, is merely a chronic enlargement of that organ, the result of inflammatory deposits and supernutrition of its proper structures.
    • 1889, Paul F. Munde/, The American Journal of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children; volume 22 issue 1, page 516:
      The result is that the veins become overcharged with blood, and we are taught by physiology that wherever there is overcharge of the venous circulation there results supernutrition, and primarily from that there develops new connective tissue.
    • 1897, JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, volume 28, page 578:
      The principal feature of carcinomatous cell proliferations can be denoted as hypermitosis, depending upon supernutrition of the cells.
    • 1907, Modern medicine - Volume 1, page 299:
      The protein of the blood plasma is not a constant but a fluctuating quantity, being lowered in sickness and subnutrition and raised in supernutrition.
    • 2009, D. Shifler, Corrosion in Marine and Saltwater Environments 3 - Issue 43, →ISBN, page 163:
      The pollution includes heavy metals, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfides and supernutrition.
  2. The ingestion of large amounts of nutrients; Hyperalimentation.
    • 2000, Willam Philpott, Dwight Kalita, Brain Allergies: The Psychonutrient and Magnetic Connections, →ISBN:
      This text explains in layperson's terms how supernutrition, magnetic therapy and other cutting edge therapies can offer hope to those suffering from so-called untreatable conditions.
    • 2009, Frederick E. Grine, John G. Fleagle, Richard E. Leakey, The First Humans: Origin and Early Evolution of the Genus Homo, page 108:
      Although both skeletal and dental development can be delayed by undernutrition or advanced by supernutrition, the dentition is much more resistant to environmental effects than is the skeleton []
  3. Overeating.
    • 1914, Phosphorus in the body, page 435:
      Biernacki (1909) sought to determine with dogs the effects of "supernutrition" on mineral metabolism. The foods added to the standard diets were butter, sugar and eggs.
    • 2012, Thomas Potthast, Simon Meisch, Climate Change and Sustainable Development, →ISBN, page 374:
      But how to change attitudes and habits in nutrition when global acting enterprises earn their money by selling billion tons of sugar and meat followed by drugs to cure diseases caused by supernutrition.

Derived terms edit