Search results for "Food Analysi"

showing 10 items of 137 documents

Review: Applications of HPLC–MS for food analysis

2012

HPLC–MS applications in the agrifood sector are among the fastest developing fields in science and industry. The present tutorial mini-review briefly describes this analytical methodology: HPLC, UHPLC, nano-HPLC on one hand, mass spectrometry (MS) and tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) on the other hand. Analytical results are grouped together based on the type of chemicals analyzed (lipids, carbohydrates, glycoproteins, vitamins, flavonoids, mycotoxins, pesticides, allergens and food additives). Results are also shown for various types of food (ham, cheese, milk, cereals, olive oil and wines). Although it is not an exhaustive list, it illustrates the main current directions of applications. …

Mass spectrometry HPLC–MS Food analysis Pesticides Wine Flavonoids Glycoproteins
researchProduct

The relationship between dietary vitamin k and depressive symptoms in late adulthood: A cross-sectional analysis from a large cohort study

2019

Few studies assessed the associations between dietary vitamin K and depressive symptoms. We aimed to investigate the association between dietary vitamin K and depressive symptoms in a large cohort of North American People. In this cross-sectional analysis, 4,375 participants that were aged 45&ndash

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyFood AnalysiCross-sectional studylcsh:TX341-641OsteoarthritisLogistic regressionDietary vitaminArticleCohort Studiesvitamin K03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinemedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineDepressive symptomsDepression (differential diagnoses)AgedCross-Sectional StudieNutrition and Dieteticsbusiness.industryConfoundingMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseCross-Sectional StudiesnutritionQuartileOsteoarthritis InitiativedepressionFemaleVitamin K DeficiencyCohort Studiebusinessdietlcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supplyFood Analysis030217 neurology & neurosurgerymental healthHumanFood Science
researchProduct

Salt and Aroma Compound Distributions Influence Flavour Release and Temporal Perception While Eating Hot-Served Flans.

2021

International audience; To counteract the negative effect of salt overconsumption on health, strategies have been developed to reduce the salt content in food products. Among them, two promising strategies based on odour-induced saltiness enhancement and the heterogeneous distribution of flavour compounds were combined and assessed in four-layer cream-based snacks. To investigate the relationship between saltiness enhancement, temporal release and perception of flavour compounds in hot snacks with heterogeneous distribution of salt and aroma compounds, complementary techniques were used: nose space PTR-Tof-MS (Proton Transfer Reaction-Time of Flight–Mass Spectrometry) to assess the release …

030309 nutrition & dieteticsFood HandlingFlavourPharmaceutical ScienceMass SpectrometryAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundDrug DiscoveryAroma compoundsaltFood science2. Zero hungerchemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesbiologyspatial distributionfood and beveragesTaste Perception04 agricultural and veterinary sciences040401 food scienceTaste intensitytemporal dominance of sensationsChemistry (miscellaneous)TasteMolecular MedicineSalt (chemistry)alternate time intensityArticlelcsh:QD241-44103 medical and health sciences0404 agricultural biotechnologylcsh:Organic chemistryHumansPhysical and Theoretical ChemistrySodium Chloride DietaryAromaflavour releaseOrganic Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationFlavoring AgentschemistryaromaFood productsOdorantsSaltsSalty tastedescriptive sensory analysisTemporal perception[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionFood AnalysisMolecules (Basel, Switzerland)
researchProduct

Congener profile, occurrence and estimated dietary intake of dioxins and dioxin-like PCBs in foods marketed in the Region of Valencia (Spain).

2011

During 2006-2008, a monitoring program was conducted on 29 target compounds, including PCDD/Fs and dl-PCBs, comprising 150 randomly collected individual food samples marketed in the Region of Valencia, Spain, grouped into 8 categories (vegetables, cereals, fats and oils, eggs, milk and dairy products, fish products, meat and meat products and fish oil). For PCDD/Fs, the highest frequency of detection corresponds to 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HpCDD, OCDD, 2,3,4,7,8-PeCDF; and PCBs 118, 105 and 156 were the more frequent dl-PCBs. The food groups presenting higher contamination, expressed as toxic equivalents (WHO-TEQs), were fish oil (6.38 pg WHO-TEQ g(-1)fat), fish (1.21 pg WHO-TEQ g(-1)w.w.) and milk an…

Chronic exposureAdultEnvironmental EngineeringMeatHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisEggsFood ContaminationDioxinsFood groupEnvironmental ChemistryHumansFood scienceChemistryDietary intakePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryEnvironmental ExposureContaminationFish oilFish productsPollutionMonitoring programPolychlorinated BiphenylsDietCongenerSpainEnvironmental PollutantsDairy ProductsPlants EdibleEnvironmental PollutionFood AnalysisChemosphere
researchProduct

Oral intake of cadmium, cobalt, copper, iron, lead, nickel, manganese and zinc in the university student's diet.

1993

A duplicate diet meal study was carried out with a group of university students living in a hostel, in order to estimate the intake of Zn, Cd, Co, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni and Pb. Zn, Cu, Fe, Mn and Ni were determined by flame atomic absorption spectrophotometry and Cd, Co and Pb by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometry after a nitric acid wet digestion procedure. The estimated intake values from the contents of breakfast, lunch, dinner and drinks were compared with the values of the Provisional Tolerable Daily Intake (PTDI) in the case of Cd and Pb, Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA) of Co, Fe and Zn and Estimated Safe and Adequate Dietetic Daily Intake (ESADDI) of Cu and Mn. Neithe…

Tolerable daily intakeMealCadmiumUniversitiesSpectrophotometry AtomicMetallurgychemistry.chemical_elementNutritional StatusFood ContaminationZincManganeselaw.inventionDietTrace ElementschemistrylawSpainHumansAtomic absorption spectroscopyGraphite furnace atomic absorptionStudentsCobaltFood AnalysisFood ScienceNuclear chemistryDie Nahrung
researchProduct

Development of a high performance thin layer chromatography method for the rapid qualification and quantification of phenolic compounds and abscisic …

2019

Honey is a natural product with a complex chemical composition consisting of sugars and other bioactive compounds. It is important in many traditional systems of medicine, exhibiting interesting bioactivities, in particular antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects. Authentication of botanical origin of honeys is particularly important in this context. Therefore, methods for quality control of honey and detection of its adulteration are very important. A HPTLC method for the quantitative determination of phenolic compounds in honey was developed for the first time. Seven phenolic compounds were detected and determined quantitatively in lime and acacia honey samples. The obtai…

Quality ControlAuthentication of monofloral honeysanimal structuresAcaciaContext (language use)engineering.material010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesBiochemistryAntioxidantsAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundPhenolsHigh performance thin layer chromatographyAbscisic acidLimeNatural productChromatographybiologyChromatographic fingerprintsOptimization of chromatographic conditionsHigh-performance thin-layer chromatographydigestive oral and skin physiologyfungi010401 analytical chemistryOrganic Chemistryfood and beveragesHoneyGeneral MedicineAntimicrobialbiology.organism_classificationPhenolic compoundsThin-layer chromatography0104 chemical scienceschemistrybehavior and behavior mechanismsengineeringChromatography Thin LayerFood AnalysisAbscisic AcidJournal of Chromatography A
researchProduct

Mineral Profile of Children’s Fast Food Menu Samples

2017

Abstract Children’s fast food menus, including hamburgers served with french fries, dessert, and a soft drink, were analyzed to obtain the mineral profile of trace elements. The developed analytical methodology involved sample digestion under pressure inside a microwave oven with a mixture of HNO3 and H2O2 and inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrometry. The method was validated by carrying out the analysis of certified reference materials (NIST 1570a spinach leaves, NCS ZC73016 chicken, and NIST 1568a rice flour) and using recovery experiments. Repeatability was verified by analyzing replicate samples. Twenty-six elements were studied, 12 of which—aluminum, barium, calcium, co…

0301 basic medicineAdolescentMicrowave ovenchemistry.chemical_element01 natural sciencesAnalytical Chemistry03 medical and health sciencesLimit of DetectionHumansEnvironmental ChemistryFood scienceChildMicrowavesPharmacologyMineralsStrontium030109 nutrition & dieteticsChemistryMagnesiumFrench friesSpectrum Analysis010401 analytical chemistryBariumHydrogen PeroxideRepeatabilityFood AnalysisTrace Elements0104 chemical sciencesCertified reference materialsMetalsChild PreschoolCalibrationFast FoodsAgronomy and Crop ScienceFood AnalysisFood ScienceJournal of AOAC INTERNATIONAL
researchProduct

Simultaneous analysis of lysine, Nɛ-carboxymethyllysine and lysinoalanine from proteins

2007

Protein quality was assayed by simultaneous measurement of lysine (Lys), carboxymethyllysine (CML) and lysinoalanine (LAL). GC-FID analysis of N-tert-butyl dimethylsilyl (tBDMSi) derivatives of these amino acids was undertaken. tBDMSi derivates were separated on a CP-SIL 5CB commercially fused silica capillary column (25 m × 0.25 mm i.d., 0.25 μm film thickness) employing a thermal gradient programmed from 200 to 300 °C. The identity of tBDMSi derivatives of Lys, CML and LAL was established by GC–MS while FID detection was employed for quantification. Analytical parameters such as linearity (lysine 350–4200 μM, LAL 3–81 μM, CML 16–172 μM), precision (1–13% variation coefficients), accuracy …

Chromatography GasG proteinEggsFluoroacetatesClinical BiochemistryLysineLysinoalanineBiochemistryAnalytical Chemistrysymbols.namesakeCaseinAcetamidesOrganosilicon CompoundsNɛ-CarboxymethyllysineLysinoalanineSoy proteinchemistry.chemical_classificationGas chromatographyChromatographyChemistryLysineProteinProteinsCell BiologyGeneral MedicineGlutenMaillard ReactionMaillard reactionsymbolsInfant FoodProtein qualityFood Analysis
researchProduct

Monitoring of chicken meat freshness by means of a colorimetric sensor array

2012

A new optoelectronic nose to monitor chicken meat ageing has been developed. It is based on 16 pigments prepared by the incorporation of different dyes (pH indicators, Lewis acids, hydrogenbonding derivatives, selective probes and natural dyes) into inorganic materials (UVM-7, silica and alumina). The colour changes of the sensor array were characteristic of chicken ageing in a modi¿ed packaging atmosphere (30% CO2¿70% N2). The chromogenic array data were processed with qualitative (PCA) and quantitative (PLS) tools. The PCA statistical analysis showed a high degree of dispersion, with nine dimensions required to explain 95% of variance. Despite this high dimensionality, a tridimensional re…

Quality ControlINGENIERIA DE LA CONSTRUCCIONMeatTime FactorsMaterials scienceAnalytical chemistryColorimetric sensor arrayBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryQUIMICA ORGANICASensor arrayLinear regressionQUIMICA ANALITICAElectrochemistryAnimalsEnvironmental ChemistryStatistical analysisLeast-Squares AnalysisPROYECTOS DE INGENIERIASpectroscopyPrincipal Component AnalysisPigmentationChromogenicQUIMICA INORGANICAPrincipal component analysisColorimetryIndicators and ReagentsInorganic materialsHigh dimensionalityBiological systemChickensFood Analysis
researchProduct

Mycotoxins in herbal teas marketed in Latvia and dietary exposure assessment

2019

The occurrence of 12 mycotoxins has been analysed by liquid chromatography - time of flight mass spectrometry in the batch of 60 herbal teas purchased from drugstores in Latvia. Among the dry tea samples, 90% were positive for one to eight mycotoxins. Enniatin B and deoxynivalenol (DON) were the most frequently detected mycotoxins in 55% and 45% of the samples, respectively. DON reached the highest level, from 129 µg kg-1 in herbal blend to 5,463 µg kg-1 in wormwood tea. Ochratoxin A (OTA) and aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) were found in 10% and 20% of the samples at the concentrations ranged between 2.99-30.3 µg kg-1 and 3.40-23.7 µg kg-1. Studies of the tea infusion process indicated that 32-100% of…

Ochratoxin AAflatoxinHplc tof msFood ContaminationBiologyToxicologyRisk AssessmentDietary Exposurechemistry.chemical_compoundTandem Mass SpectrometryHumansFood scienceMycotoxinZearalenoneChromatography High Pressure LiquidEnniatin BDietary exposurePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthReproducibility of ResultsMycotoxinsLatviaHplc ms mschemistryTeas HerbalFood AnalysisFood ScienceFood Additives & Contaminants: Part B
researchProduct