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Effect of lecithins partly replacing rumen‐protected fat on fatty acid digestion and composition of cow milk
Author(s) -
Wettstein HansRudolf,
Scheeder Martin R. L.,
Sutter Franz,
Kreuzer Michael
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
european journal of lipid science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.614
H-Index - 94
eISSN - 1438-9312
pISSN - 1438-7697
DOI - 10.1002/1438-9312(200101)103:1<12::aid-ejlt12>3.0.co;2-x
Subject(s) - canola , chemistry , food science , soybean oil , fatty acid , digestion (alchemy) , lecithin , rumen , composition (language) , conjugated linoleic acid , linoleic acid , biochemistry , chromatography , linguistics , philosophy , fermentation
The effects on fatty acid digestibility and milk fat composition of calcium soaps of palm oil fatty acids and of a 25% replacement of the Ca soaps by four different lecithins (raw, deoiled and deoiled/partially hydrolysed soy lecithin, raw canola lecithin) and soybean oil were investigated in six lactating cows each. The complete diets contained the lipid supplements at proportions of 30 g fatty acids/kg dry matter. Partial replacement of Ca soaps by soy or canola lecithins and soybean oil had small but significant effects on fatty acid digestion and utilisation, as well as the fatty acid profile in milk. Relative to Ca soaps alone, C 16:0 digestibility was slightly higher with lecithins, and percentage of conjugated linoleic acid and trans C 18:1 in milk fat increased while proportion of C 16:0 decreased. Deoiling of lecithins slightly reduced the effects on C 16:0 digestibility and excretion with milk. The influence of lecithin processing was higher than the differences between raw soy and raw canola lecithin. Nevertheless, most of the few effects observed may be related to the fatty acids supplied with the lecithins but, regarding C 18:1 trans ‐11 and odd chain fatty acids, there is some evidence that lecithins impair rumen microbial activity less than soybean oil.