Cargando…

Newly formulated, protein quality-enhanced, extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, corn-, soya-, sugar- and oil-containing fortified-blended foods lead to adequate vitamin A and iron outcomes and improved growth compared with non-extruded CSB+ in rats

Corn and soyabean micronutrient-fortified-blended foods (FBF) are commonly used for food aid. Sorghum and cowpeas have been suggested as alternative commodities because they are drought tolerant, can be grown in many localities, and are not genetically modified. Change in formulation of blends may i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Delimont, Nicole M., Fiorentino, Nicole M., Opoku-Acheampong, Alexander B., Joseph, Michael V., Guo, Qingbin, Alavi, Sajid, Lindshield, Brian L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5468745/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28630695
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jns.2017.15
_version_ 1783243474143805440
author Delimont, Nicole M.
Fiorentino, Nicole M.
Opoku-Acheampong, Alexander B.
Joseph, Michael V.
Guo, Qingbin
Alavi, Sajid
Lindshield, Brian L.
author_facet Delimont, Nicole M.
Fiorentino, Nicole M.
Opoku-Acheampong, Alexander B.
Joseph, Michael V.
Guo, Qingbin
Alavi, Sajid
Lindshield, Brian L.
author_sort Delimont, Nicole M.
collection PubMed
description Corn and soyabean micronutrient-fortified-blended foods (FBF) are commonly used for food aid. Sorghum and cowpeas have been suggested as alternative commodities because they are drought tolerant, can be grown in many localities, and are not genetically modified. Change in formulation of blends may improve protein quality, vitamin A and Fe availability of FBF. The primary objective of this study was to compare protein efficiency, Fe and vitamin A availability of newly formulated extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, soya- and corn-based FBF, along with a current, non-extruded United States Agency for International Development (USAID) corn and soya blend FBF (CSB+). A second objective was to compare protein efficiency of whey protein concentrate (WPC) and soya protein isolate (SPI) containing FBF to determine whether WPC inclusion improved outcomes. Eight groups of growing rats (n 10) consumed two white and one red sorghum–cowpea (WSC1 + WPC, WSC2 + WPC, RSC + WPC), white sorghum–soya (WSS + WPC) and corn–soya (CSB14 + WPC) extruded WPC-containing FBF, an extruded white sorghum–cowpea with SPI (WSC1 + SPI), non-extruded CSB+, and American Institute of Nutrition (AIN)-93G, a weanling rat diet, for 4 weeks. There were no significant differences in protein efficiency, Fe or vitamin A outcomes between WPC FBF groups. The CSB+ group consumed significantly less food, gained significantly less weight, and had significantly lower energy efficiency, protein efficiency and length, compared with all other groups. Compared with WSC1 + WPC, the WSC1 + SPI FBF group had significantly lower energy efficiency, protein efficiency and weight gain. These results suggest that a variety of commodities can be used in the formulation of FBF, and that newly formulated extruded FBF are of better nutritional quality than non-extruded CSB+.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5468745
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-54687452017-06-19 Newly formulated, protein quality-enhanced, extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, corn-, soya-, sugar- and oil-containing fortified-blended foods lead to adequate vitamin A and iron outcomes and improved growth compared with non-extruded CSB+ in rats Delimont, Nicole M. Fiorentino, Nicole M. Opoku-Acheampong, Alexander B. Joseph, Michael V. Guo, Qingbin Alavi, Sajid Lindshield, Brian L. J Nutr Sci Research Article Corn and soyabean micronutrient-fortified-blended foods (FBF) are commonly used for food aid. Sorghum and cowpeas have been suggested as alternative commodities because they are drought tolerant, can be grown in many localities, and are not genetically modified. Change in formulation of blends may improve protein quality, vitamin A and Fe availability of FBF. The primary objective of this study was to compare protein efficiency, Fe and vitamin A availability of newly formulated extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, soya- and corn-based FBF, along with a current, non-extruded United States Agency for International Development (USAID) corn and soya blend FBF (CSB+). A second objective was to compare protein efficiency of whey protein concentrate (WPC) and soya protein isolate (SPI) containing FBF to determine whether WPC inclusion improved outcomes. Eight groups of growing rats (n 10) consumed two white and one red sorghum–cowpea (WSC1 + WPC, WSC2 + WPC, RSC + WPC), white sorghum–soya (WSS + WPC) and corn–soya (CSB14 + WPC) extruded WPC-containing FBF, an extruded white sorghum–cowpea with SPI (WSC1 + SPI), non-extruded CSB+, and American Institute of Nutrition (AIN)-93G, a weanling rat diet, for 4 weeks. There were no significant differences in protein efficiency, Fe or vitamin A outcomes between WPC FBF groups. The CSB+ group consumed significantly less food, gained significantly less weight, and had significantly lower energy efficiency, protein efficiency and length, compared with all other groups. Compared with WSC1 + WPC, the WSC1 + SPI FBF group had significantly lower energy efficiency, protein efficiency and weight gain. These results suggest that a variety of commodities can be used in the formulation of FBF, and that newly formulated extruded FBF are of better nutritional quality than non-extruded CSB+. Cambridge University Press 2017-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC5468745/ /pubmed/28630695 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jns.2017.15 Text en © The Author(s) 2017 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Delimont, Nicole M.
Fiorentino, Nicole M.
Opoku-Acheampong, Alexander B.
Joseph, Michael V.
Guo, Qingbin
Alavi, Sajid
Lindshield, Brian L.
Newly formulated, protein quality-enhanced, extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, corn-, soya-, sugar- and oil-containing fortified-blended foods lead to adequate vitamin A and iron outcomes and improved growth compared with non-extruded CSB+ in rats
title Newly formulated, protein quality-enhanced, extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, corn-, soya-, sugar- and oil-containing fortified-blended foods lead to adequate vitamin A and iron outcomes and improved growth compared with non-extruded CSB+ in rats
title_full Newly formulated, protein quality-enhanced, extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, corn-, soya-, sugar- and oil-containing fortified-blended foods lead to adequate vitamin A and iron outcomes and improved growth compared with non-extruded CSB+ in rats
title_fullStr Newly formulated, protein quality-enhanced, extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, corn-, soya-, sugar- and oil-containing fortified-blended foods lead to adequate vitamin A and iron outcomes and improved growth compared with non-extruded CSB+ in rats
title_full_unstemmed Newly formulated, protein quality-enhanced, extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, corn-, soya-, sugar- and oil-containing fortified-blended foods lead to adequate vitamin A and iron outcomes and improved growth compared with non-extruded CSB+ in rats
title_short Newly formulated, protein quality-enhanced, extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, corn-, soya-, sugar- and oil-containing fortified-blended foods lead to adequate vitamin A and iron outcomes and improved growth compared with non-extruded CSB+ in rats
title_sort newly formulated, protein quality-enhanced, extruded sorghum-, cowpea-, corn-, soya-, sugar- and oil-containing fortified-blended foods lead to adequate vitamin a and iron outcomes and improved growth compared with non-extruded csb+ in rats
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5468745/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28630695
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jns.2017.15
work_keys_str_mv AT delimontnicolem newlyformulatedproteinqualityenhancedextrudedsorghumcowpeacornsoyasugarandoilcontainingfortifiedblendedfoodsleadtoadequatevitaminaandironoutcomesandimprovedgrowthcomparedwithnonextrudedcsbinrats
AT fiorentinonicolem newlyformulatedproteinqualityenhancedextrudedsorghumcowpeacornsoyasugarandoilcontainingfortifiedblendedfoodsleadtoadequatevitaminaandironoutcomesandimprovedgrowthcomparedwithnonextrudedcsbinrats
AT opokuacheampongalexanderb newlyformulatedproteinqualityenhancedextrudedsorghumcowpeacornsoyasugarandoilcontainingfortifiedblendedfoodsleadtoadequatevitaminaandironoutcomesandimprovedgrowthcomparedwithnonextrudedcsbinrats
AT josephmichaelv newlyformulatedproteinqualityenhancedextrudedsorghumcowpeacornsoyasugarandoilcontainingfortifiedblendedfoodsleadtoadequatevitaminaandironoutcomesandimprovedgrowthcomparedwithnonextrudedcsbinrats
AT guoqingbin newlyformulatedproteinqualityenhancedextrudedsorghumcowpeacornsoyasugarandoilcontainingfortifiedblendedfoodsleadtoadequatevitaminaandironoutcomesandimprovedgrowthcomparedwithnonextrudedcsbinrats
AT alavisajid newlyformulatedproteinqualityenhancedextrudedsorghumcowpeacornsoyasugarandoilcontainingfortifiedblendedfoodsleadtoadequatevitaminaandironoutcomesandimprovedgrowthcomparedwithnonextrudedcsbinrats
AT lindshieldbrianl newlyformulatedproteinqualityenhancedextrudedsorghumcowpeacornsoyasugarandoilcontainingfortifiedblendedfoodsleadtoadequatevitaminaandironoutcomesandimprovedgrowthcomparedwithnonextrudedcsbinrats