Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5792524 Meat Science 2012 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

The effect of solvent to sample ratio on total extracted lipids and fatty acid (FA) composition in meat products with different fat contents was evaluated. Total lipids were extracted according to the Folch et al. (1957) method, using a 20:1 ratio of chloroform:methanol (2:1, v/v) to sample (A), and also testing the solvent:sample ratio of 10:1 (B). Higher amounts of total lipids and total FA from neutral lipids were obtained using the A ratio, which could be due to an insufficient chloroform:dry-weight sample proportion which could be insufficient for solubilizing the total amount of lipids. In the polar lipid fraction, the total amount of FA was higher using the B rather than the A ratio, which may be caused by the higher volume of added water when using A than B. When studying the FA composition of different lipid fractions, the volume of both the solvent and the water for total lipid extraction should be considered.

► Solvent:sample ratio influences on total lipid extracted in meat products. ► Solvent:sample ratio effects on fatty acid profile in meat products. ► Solvent:sample ratio effects are not related to lipid content in meat products. ► 20:1 solvent:sample ratio quantifies accurately lipid content in meat products. ► Solvent and water extraction volume should be considered when analyzing fatty acids.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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