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Effect of Extrusion on Hypocholesterolemic Properties of Rice, Oat, Corn, and Wheat Bran Diets in Hamsters
Author(s) -
Kahlon T. S.,
Edwards R. H.,
Chow F. I.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
cereal chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.558
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1943-3638
pISSN - 0009-0352
DOI - 10.1094/cchem.1998.75.6.897
Subject(s) - bran , chemistry , cholesterol , food science , agronomy , zoology , biology , biochemistry , raw material , organic chemistry
ABSTRACT Brans from rice, oats, corn, and wheat were cooked in a twin‐screw extruder at either high or low energy input, and their cholesterol‐lowering effects were compared with those of unprocessed brans when fed to four‐week‐old male golden Syrian hamsters ( n = 10 per treatment) for three weeks. Peanut oil was added to oat, corn, and wheat bran during the extrusion process to match the oil content of rice bran. Diets contained 10% total dietary fiber, 10.3% fat, 3% nitrogen, and 0.3% cholesterol. Plasma and liver cholesterol and total liver lipids were significantly lower with low‐energy extruded wheat bran compared with unprocessed wheat bran. Extrusion did not alter the hypocholesterolemic effects of rice, oat, or corn brans. Plasma and liver cholesterol levels with corn bran were similar to those with oat bran. Relative cholesterol‐lowering effects of the brans, determined with pooled (extruded and unextruded) bran data, were rice bran > oat bran > corn bran > wheat bran. Rice bran diets resulted in significantly lower levels of total plasma cholesterol and very low density lipoprotein cholesterol compared with all other brans. Total liver cholesterol and liver cholesterol concentrations (mg/g) were significantly lower with high‐energy extruded rice bran compared with the cellulose control group. Plasma cholesterol and total liver cholesterol values with low‐energy extruded wheat bran were similar to those with rice bran (unextruded or extruded) diets. Lowered cholesterol with rice bran diets may result in part from greater lipid and sterol excretion with these diets. Results with low‐energy extruded wheat bran suggest that this type of processing may improve the potential for lowering cholesterol with wheat bran products.