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Calcium Bioavailability from Ripening Cheddar Cheese
Author(s) -
BUCHOWSKI MACIEJ S.,
MILLER DENNIS D.
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
journal of food science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 150
eISSN - 1750-3841
pISSN - 0022-1147
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2621.1990.tb03919.x
Subject(s) - bioavailability , chemistry , calcium , food science , absorption (acoustics) , ripening , pasteurization , calcium metabolism , biology , pharmacology , physics , organic chemistry , acoustics
Calcium bioavailability to rats was compared from CaCl 2 (28 mM), CaCO 3 , fresh milk, milk adjusted to pH 5.35, and Cheddar cheese. The cheese was manufactured from pasteurized bovine milk and all doses were labeled extrinsically with 45 Ca and 47 Ca and administered orally to rats. One label ( 45 Ca) was added to milk before cheese manufacture and the other ( 47 Ca) was added to the cheese 24 h prior to dosing. Calcium bioavailability was determined by: 1) absorption measured by whole body counting, and 2) availability for bone metabolism assessed by bone radioactivity measurements. Calcium absorption averaged 76.8% and was not affected by length of ripening (p>0.05). Absorption from CaCl 2 , CaCO 3 , fresh milk, milk at pH 5.35, and the cheeses was similar. The two methods gave similar estimates of relative bioavailability. The ratio of 47 Ca absorption to 45 Ca absorption for any cheese sample was significantly greater than 1, indicating extrinsic labels added after processing may overestimate Ca absorption from cheese.