Food lipids: their effects on quality and oxidative stability of animal tissues and emulsions

Lipolysis and oxidation of lipids in foods are the major biochemical and chemical processes that cause food quality deterioration, leading to the characteristic, unpalatable odour and flavour called rancidity. In addition to unpalatability, rancidity may give rise to toxic levels of certain compound...

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Main Author: Cardenia, Vladimiro <1979>
Other Authors: Rodriguez Estrada, Maria Teresa
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:en
Published: Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/2956/
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spelling ndltd-unibo.it-oai-amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it-29562014-03-24T16:28:48Z Food lipids: their effects on quality and oxidative stability of animal tissues and emulsions Cardenia, Vladimiro <1979> AGR/15 Scienze e tecnologie alimentari Lipolysis and oxidation of lipids in foods are the major biochemical and chemical processes that cause food quality deterioration, leading to the characteristic, unpalatable odour and flavour called rancidity. In addition to unpalatability, rancidity may give rise to toxic levels of certain compounds like aldehydes, hydroperoxides, epoxides and cholesterol oxidation products. In this PhD study chromatographic and spectroscopic techniques were employed to determine the degree of lipid oxidation in different animal products and its relationship with technological parameters like feeding fat sources, packaging, processing and storage conditions. To achieve this goal capillary gas chromatography (CGC) was employed not only to determine the fatty acids profile but also, after solid phase extraction, the amount of sterols (cholesterol and phytosterols) and cholesterol oxidation products (COPs). To determine hydroperoxides, primary products of oxidation and quantify secondary products UV/VIS absorbance spectroscopy was applied. Beef and pork meat in this study were analysed. In actual fact, lipid oxidation is a major deterioration reaction in meat, meat products and results in adverse changes in the colour, flavour, texture of meat and develops different compounds which should be a risk to human health as oxysterols. On beef and pork meat, a study of lipid fraction during storage was carried out to evaluate its shelf-life and some nutritional features life saturated/unsaturated fatty acids ratio and sterols content, in according to the interest that has been growing around functional food in the last years. The last part of this research was focused on the study of lipid oxidation in emulsions. In oil-in-water emulsions antioxidant activity of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) was evaluated. The rates of lipid oxidation of 1.0% stripped soybean oil-in-water emulsions with DOPC were followed by monitoring lipid hydroperoxide and hexanal as indicators of primary and secondary oxidation products and the droplet surface charge or zeta potential (ζ) of the emulsions with varying concentrations of DOPC were tested. This manuscript reports the main results obtained in the three activities briefly summarized as follows: 1. study on effects of feeding composition on the photoxidative stability of lipids from beef meat, evaluated during storage under commercial retail conditions; 2. evaluation of effects of diets and storage conditions on the oxidative stability of pork meat lipids; 3. study on oxidative behavior of DOPC in stripped soybean oil-in-water emulsions stabilized by nonionic surfactant. Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna Rodriguez Estrada, Maria Teresa 2010-05-19 Doctoral Thesis PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/2956/ info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
collection NDLTD
language en
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic AGR/15 Scienze e tecnologie alimentari
spellingShingle AGR/15 Scienze e tecnologie alimentari
Cardenia, Vladimiro <1979>
Food lipids: their effects on quality and oxidative stability of animal tissues and emulsions
description Lipolysis and oxidation of lipids in foods are the major biochemical and chemical processes that cause food quality deterioration, leading to the characteristic, unpalatable odour and flavour called rancidity. In addition to unpalatability, rancidity may give rise to toxic levels of certain compounds like aldehydes, hydroperoxides, epoxides and cholesterol oxidation products. In this PhD study chromatographic and spectroscopic techniques were employed to determine the degree of lipid oxidation in different animal products and its relationship with technological parameters like feeding fat sources, packaging, processing and storage conditions. To achieve this goal capillary gas chromatography (CGC) was employed not only to determine the fatty acids profile but also, after solid phase extraction, the amount of sterols (cholesterol and phytosterols) and cholesterol oxidation products (COPs). To determine hydroperoxides, primary products of oxidation and quantify secondary products UV/VIS absorbance spectroscopy was applied. Beef and pork meat in this study were analysed. In actual fact, lipid oxidation is a major deterioration reaction in meat, meat products and results in adverse changes in the colour, flavour, texture of meat and develops different compounds which should be a risk to human health as oxysterols. On beef and pork meat, a study of lipid fraction during storage was carried out to evaluate its shelf-life and some nutritional features life saturated/unsaturated fatty acids ratio and sterols content, in according to the interest that has been growing around functional food in the last years. The last part of this research was focused on the study of lipid oxidation in emulsions. In oil-in-water emulsions antioxidant activity of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) was evaluated. The rates of lipid oxidation of 1.0% stripped soybean oil-in-water emulsions with DOPC were followed by monitoring lipid hydroperoxide and hexanal as indicators of primary and secondary oxidation products and the droplet surface charge or zeta potential (ζ) of the emulsions with varying concentrations of DOPC were tested. This manuscript reports the main results obtained in the three activities briefly summarized as follows: 1. study on effects of feeding composition on the photoxidative stability of lipids from beef meat, evaluated during storage under commercial retail conditions; 2. evaluation of effects of diets and storage conditions on the oxidative stability of pork meat lipids; 3. study on oxidative behavior of DOPC in stripped soybean oil-in-water emulsions stabilized by nonionic surfactant.
author2 Rodriguez Estrada, Maria Teresa
author_facet Rodriguez Estrada, Maria Teresa
Cardenia, Vladimiro <1979>
author Cardenia, Vladimiro <1979>
author_sort Cardenia, Vladimiro <1979>
title Food lipids: their effects on quality and oxidative stability of animal tissues and emulsions
title_short Food lipids: their effects on quality and oxidative stability of animal tissues and emulsions
title_full Food lipids: their effects on quality and oxidative stability of animal tissues and emulsions
title_fullStr Food lipids: their effects on quality and oxidative stability of animal tissues and emulsions
title_full_unstemmed Food lipids: their effects on quality and oxidative stability of animal tissues and emulsions
title_sort food lipids: their effects on quality and oxidative stability of animal tissues and emulsions
publisher Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
publishDate 2010
url http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/2956/
work_keys_str_mv AT cardeniavladimiro1979 foodlipidstheireffectsonqualityandoxidativestabilityofanimaltissuesandemulsions
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