Presence of Acetamide in Milk and Beef from Cattle Consuming AFEX-Treated Crop Residues
Author(s) -
Bryan Bals,
Farzaneh Teymouri,
Diane Haddad,
W. Allen Julian,
Ramin Vismeh,
A. Daniel Jones,
Preeti Mor,
B.J. Van Soest,
Amrish Kumar Tyagi,
M.J. VandeHaar,
Venkataraman Bringi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of agricultural and food chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.203
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1520-5118
pISSN - 0021-8561
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b04030
Subject(s) - acetamide , chemistry , crop residue , zoology , agronomy , dry matter , crop , acceptable daily intake , nutrient , food science , biology , pesticide , agriculture , ecology , organic chemistry
AFEX treatment of crop residues can greatly increase their nutrient availability for ruminants. This study investigated the concentration of acetamide, an ammoniation byproduct, in AFEX-treated crop residues and in milk and meat from ruminants fed these residues. Acetamide concentrations in four AFEX-treated cereal crop residues were comparable and reproducible (4-7 mg/g dry matter). A transient acetamide peak in milk was detected following introduction of AFEX-treated residues to the diet, but an alternative regimen showed the peak can be effectively mitigated. Milk acetamide concentration following this transition was 6 and 10 ppm for cattle and buffalo, respectively, but also decreased over time for cattle while tending to decrease ( p = 0.08) for buffalo. There was no difference in acetamide concentration in the meat of cattle consuming AFEX-treated residues for 160 days compared to controls. Further investigation is necessary to determine the metabolism of acetamide in ruminants and a maximum acceptable daily intake for humans.
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