Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1886367 Radiation Physics and Chemistry 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

In the present study the combined effect of gamma irradiation (1, 3 and 5 kGy) and storage at two temperatures: refrigeration (+4 °C) and frozen (−18 °C), on the shelf-life extension of fresh shrimp meat was investigated. The study was based on microbiological and physicochemical changes occuring in the shrimp samples. Total volatile base nitrogen values and trimethylamine values for irradiated shrimp samples were significantly lower than non-irradiated samples at both storage temperatures, and the rate of decrease was more pronounced in samples irradiated at the higher dose (p<0.05). Thiobarbituric acid values for irradiated shrimp samples were significantly higher than non-irradiated samples at both storage temperatures (p<0.05). pH values of shrimp samples were affected significantly by both irradiating dose and storage temperatures (p<0.05). Microbial counts for non-irradiated shrimp samples were higher than the respective irradiated samples at both storage temperatures (p<0.05). The results revealed that irradiation at high dose (5 kGy) might enhance lipid oxidation, although the growth of microorganisms and protein oxidation was inhibited.

► We examine the combined effect of irradiation and storage low temperatures on shrimp. ► Irradiation and low temperature storage reduce the bacterial growth in shrimp. ► Irradiation with frozen storage extend the shelf-life of shrimp meat to about 90 days. ► The combined application stabilize the chemical characteristics of shrimp meat

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Radiation
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