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Ability of dietary antioxidants to affect lipid oxidation of cooked turkey meat in a simulated stomach and blood lipids after a meal
Authors:Matthew Kuffa  Teresa J Priesbe  Christian G Krueger  Jess D Reed  Mark P Richards
Affiliation:Department of Animal Sciences, Meat Science and Muscle Biology Laboratory, 1805 Linden Dr., University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, United States
Abstract:Oxidized lipids that form during digestion of a meal have the potential to promote reactions that incur vascular disease. A grape seed extract (1% of the meat weight) and butylated hydroxytoluene (0.2% of the lipid weight) were each effective at preventing formation of lipid oxidation products for 3 h during co-incubation with cooked turkey meat in simulated gastric fluid (SGF). Grape seed extract (GSE) at 0.1% of the meat weight accelerated lipid peroxide formation in SGF. Increasing concentrations of GSE decreased the ability of iron to partition into isolated microsomes. Swine trials were conducted in which cooked meat or cooked meat with added antioxidants were fed (seven meals during seven days). Lipid oxidation products were measured in chylomicrons from blood samples that were withdrawn 3 and 4 h after the last meal. Each of the antioxidant treatments that prevented lipid oxidation in SGF also inhibited formation of conjugated dienes in blood chylomicrons (P < 0.05). Mechanisms of polyphenol effects are discussed.
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