69 research outputs found

    Proximate Analysis of Five Wild Fruits of Mozambique

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    Mozambique is rich in wild fruit trees, most of which produce fleshy fruits commonly consumed in rural communities, especially during dry seasons. However, information on their content of macronutrients is scarce. Five wild fruit species (Adansonia digitata, Landolphia kirkii, Sclerocarya birrea, Salacia kraussii, and Vangueria infausta) from different districts in Mozambique were selected for the study. The contents of dry matter, fat, protein, ash, sugars, pH, and titratable acidity were determined in the fruit pulps. Also kernels of A. digitata and S. birrea were included in the study. The protein content in the pulp was below 5 g/100 g of dry matter, but a daily intake of 100 g fresh wild fruits would provide up to 11% of the recommended daily intake for children from 4 to 8 years old. The sugar content varied between 2.3% and 14.4% fresh weight. The pH was below 3, except for Salacia kraussii, for which it was slightly below 7. Kernels of A. digitata contained, on average, 39.2% protein and 38.0% fat, and S. birrea kernels 32.6% protein and 60.7% fat. The collection of nutritional information may serve as a basis for increased consumption and utilization

    Problems associated with the determination of heterocyclic amines in cooked foods and human exposure.

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    Epidemiological studies have shown diet to be an important factor in the global variation of human cancer rates. The presence of mutagenic/carcinogenic heterocyclic aromatic amines (HAs) in cooked foods has attracted a great deal of interest for more than 20 years. Accurate assessment of the human exposure to HAs requires food questionnaires that address cooking methods and reliable methods for the analysis of HAs in cooked foods, and of biomarkers of exposure. The complex food matrix, the low amounts of HAs present (ng/g), and the need for several isolation steps make accurate quantification difficult. Food composition, for example the concentrations and relative amounts of naturally occurring precursors, such as creatine, free amino acids and sugars and also the presence of enhancing or inhibiting compounds are known to greatly influence the formation of HAs. Cooking temperature and time are other important factors that affect the yield of HAs. One of the most abundant HAs, PhIP (2-amino-1-methyl-6-phenyl-imidazo[4,5-b]pyridine), is found typically in amounts up to around 35 ng/g, but there are some reports on much higher levels of PhIP. The levels of other HAs such as MeIQx (2-amino-3,8-dimethylimidazo[4,5-f]quinoxaline) and IFP (2-amino-1,6-dimethylfuro[3,2-e]imidazo[4,5-b]pyridine) generally range from not detectable up to 10 ng/g, and AalphaC (2-amino-9H-pyrido[2,3-b]indole) up to 20 ng/g. Among the factors that influence human exposure to HAs are the type of food, cooking method, portion size and intake frequency. The estimated daily intake of HAs in different studies ranges from 0 to around 15 microg per person per day

    Blue cotton, Blue Rayon and Blue Chitin in the analysis of heterocyclic aromatic amines - a review

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    Heterocyclic amines (HCAs) are a group of compounds formed when protein-rich foods, such as meat or fish, are prepared under normal cooking conditions, such as frying, grilling, or broiling. To evaluate and estimate the risks associated with HCAs contained in the diet, it is important to determine the levels in cooked foods, and the levels of HCAs and metabolites in the body. HCAs are normally found at low amounts in a complex matrix, which necessitates a good purification method and a sensitive detection system. The objective of this review was to briefly present the current knowledge on the use of Blue Cotton, Blue Rayon and Blue Chitin in the analysis of HCAs. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    The HEATOX project – an overview

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    The HEATOX project: Heat-generated food toxicants: Identification, Characterisation and Risk Minimisation

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    To break new ground : How women made use of secondary teacher education around 1900

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    Here a group of Stockholm women at the turn of the 20th century are in focus. Inspired by the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu their lives and careers are analysed. The four women were pioneers. They studied at university and after the university degree they continued another year and got a formal education as secondary teachers at a time when it was almost impossible for a woman to work as one. Three of them tried to get into the secondary school as teachers – one succeeded, the first one who tried around 1880. One did not even tried; she was a teacher at a girl school, like those who failed a couple of years after 1900 and 1915. Irrespective of how these women acted they used the educational opportunities of the time. But they went different paths after their exam. This can be understood by their capital and their social and historical room, when they came to decision. Two of the women, Ellen Fries and Astrid Cleve von Euler, are specially focused. Their views of educational issues are discussed as a part of the understanding the strategies of the women. The strategies these women used were imitations of the male ones. They choose the same education as the men. They did not want to create a public sphere of female education. They wanted to work at secondary schools just like the men and under the same conditions. They wanted to be part of the established structure without questioning it, even if their behaviour in itself was a challenge. On order to reach that goal they pointed out competence in front of sex. They did not manage themselves, but their way of imitating the men led to success for generations to come. Keywords: educational history, secondary schools, female pioneers, female teachers, Astrid Cleve von Euler, Ellen Fries, Betty Pettersson, Anna Ahlström

    Heterocyclic amines in poultry products: a literature review.

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    Health risks associated with heterocyclic amines in cooked foods have been discussed and analysed since the presence of these food mutagens was first detected. Intake, metabolism, carcinogenicity and epidemiology are important parameters in the risk assessment of heterocyclic amines. It is very difficult to determine the human intake of heterocyclic amines, as the content in cooked meat is highly dependent on the type of meat and how it has been prepared. This review summarises data on estimates of the content of heterocyclic amines in heat-treated poultry products

    Genotoxicity of heat-processed foods

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    Gene-environment interactions include exposure to genotoxic compounds from our diet and it is no doubt, that humans are regularly exposed to e.g. food toxicants, not least from cooked foods. This paper reviews briefly four classes of cooked food toxicants, e.g. acrylamide, heterocyclic amines, nitrosamines and polyaromatic hydrocarbons. Many of these compounds have been recognised for decades also as environmental pollutants. In addition cigarette smokers and some occupational workers are exposed to them. Their occurrence, formation, metabolic activation, genotoxicity and human cancer risk are briefly presented along with figures on estimated exposure. Several lines of evidence indicate that cooking conditions and dietary habits can contribute to human cancer risk through the ingestion of genotoxic compounds from heat-processed foods. Such compounds cause different types of DNA damage: nucleotide alterations and gross chromosomal aberrations. Most genotoxic compounds begin their action at the DNA level by forming carcinogen-DNA adducts, which result from the covalent binding of a carcinogen or part of a carcinogen to a nucleotide. The genotoxic and carcinogenic potential of these cooked food toxicants have been evaluated regularly by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), which has come to the conclusion that several of these food-borne toxicants present in cooked foods are possibly (2A) or probably (213) carcinogenic to humans, based on both high-dose, long-term animal studies and in vitro and in vivo genotoxicity tests. Yet, there is insufficient scientific evidence that these genotoxic compounds really cause human cancer, and no limits have been set for their presence in cooked foods. However, the competent authorities in most Western countries recommend minimising their occurrence, therefore this aspect is also included in this review. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
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