Browsing by Author "Ibáñez, Elena"
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- Analysis of antioxidants from orange juice using countercurrent supercritical fluid extration, micellar electrokinetic chromatography and reverse phase-HPLC .
2002-09-19T15:39:44Z Antioxidants from orange juice were determined by the combined use of countercurrent supercritical fluid extraction (CC-SFE) prior to reverse-phase liquic chromatography (RP-LC) or micellar electrokinetic chromatography (MEKC). The separation of antioxidants found in the SFE fractions was achieved by using a new MEKC method and a published LC procedure, both using diode array detection. The characterization of the different antioxidants was further done by LC-mass spectrometry. Advantages and drawbacks of LC and MEKC for analyzing the antioxidants found in the different orange extracts are discussed. Although LC yields higher peak area and slightly better reproducibility than MEKC, the latter technique provides information about the CC-SFE extracts in analysis times 7 times faster than by LC. This analysis advantage can be used for the quick adjustment of CC-SFE conditions, thus providing a fast way to obtain orange fractions of specific composition.
- Metabolomic approach to the nutraceutical effect of rosemary extract plus omega-3 PUFAs in diabetic children with capillary electrophoresis.
2010-09-14 Type 1 diabetes mellitus is a major endocrine disorder, affecting approximately 5% of the world’s population. It not only leads to hyperglycaemia but also causes many complications, and numerous studies have demonstrated that oxidative stress contributes to these complications. As a new strategy to improve the oxidative damage in diabetes, interest has grown in the usage of natural antioxidants, even more in the long term. Among them, Rosmarinus officinalis (rosemary) has been widely accepted as one of the species with the highest antioxidant activity. In addition, -3 polyunsaturated fatty acids were efficient in delaying and decreasing cardiovascular risk factors associated with diabetes. Type 1 diabetic children and the corresponding controls were enrolled in the assay. The aim was evaluating the effect of a special additive containing rosemary extract, vitamin E and PUFAs added to their standard diet through the meat. In the analytical point of view, a metabolomic approach with CEUV was used to detect possible differences in urine of diabetic children as compared to controls. After the application of the appropriate multivariate statistical tools, clear differences could be observed between treated and non-treated diabetic children and some of the metabolites associated could be identified. This was specially challenging as most of the clinical biochemical parameters measured by target analysis showed no differences between the groups.
- Tocopherol measurement in edible products of vegetable origin.
2004-09-19T15:40:28Z Since natural antioxidants present increasing interest for food industry due to their beneficial effect on health, new potential sources have been screened among edible aromatic plants and a microalgae, Spirulina platensis. The determination was performed after optimising a previously validated method, because important differences have been found among values described in literature for tocopherol content in products of vegetable origin. Values obtained ranged from 3.42 mg -tocopherol/100 g of dill to 132.2 mg/100 g of fresh bay and from 0.14 mg -tocopherol/100 g of spearmint to 3.45 mg/100 g of parsley. In all cases results were calculated from fresh leaves. Preliminary experiments were developed with bay (Laurus nobilis) plant to devise the supercritical fluid extraction of tocopherols, generating environmentally friendly processes to selectively extract fractions enriched with antioxidant compounds while removing fractions corresponding to essential oils, that is, those that correspond to the characteristic aroma of the plants. Another striking result has been the tocopherol content in the microalgae, 1.3 mg -tocopherol/100 g of dried commercial spirulina, which do not justify the supposed source of antioxidant vitamins. Results suggest the need of more reliable determinations of tocopherols in vegetable sources to be included in databases.