scholarly journals Enhancement of intragastric acid stability of a fat emulsion meal delays gastric emptying and increases cholecystokinin release and gallbladder contraction

2007 ◽  
Vol 292 (6) ◽  
pp. G1607-G1613 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Marciani ◽  
Martin Wickham ◽  
Gulzar Singh ◽  
Debbie Bush ◽  
Barbara Pick ◽  
...  

Preprocessed fatty foods often contain calories added as a fat emulsion stabilized by emulsifiers. Emulsion stability in the acidic gastric environment can readily be manipulated by altering emulsifier chemistry. We tested the hypothesis that it would be possible to control gastric emptying, CCK release, and satiety by varying intragastric fat emulsion stability. Nine healthy volunteers received a test meal on two occasions, comprising a 500-ml 15% oil emulsion with 2.5% of one of two emulsifiers that produced emulsions that were either stable ( meal A) or unstable ( meal B) in the acid gastric environment. Gastric emptying and gallbladder volume changes were assessed by MRI. CCK plasma levels were measured and satiety scores were recorded. Meal B layered rapidly owing to fat emulsion breakdown. The gastric half-emptying time of the aqueous phase was faster for meal B (72 ± 13 min) than for meal A (171 ± 35 min, P < 0.008). Meal A released more CCK than meal B (integrated areas, respectively 1,095 ± 244 and 531 ± 111 pmol·min·l−1, P < 0.02), induced a greater gallbladder contraction ( P < 0.02), and decreased postprandial appetite ( P < 0.05), although no significant differences were observed in fullness and hunger. We conclude that acid-stable emulsions delayed gastric emptying and increased postprandial CCK levels and gallbladder contraction, whereas acid-instability led to rapid layering of fat in the gastric lumen with accelerated gastric emptying, lower CCK levels, and reduced gallbladder contraction. Manipulation of the acid stability of fat emulsion added to preprocessed foods could maximize satiety signaling and, in turn, help to reduce overconsumption of calories.

2008 ◽  
Vol 101 (6) ◽  
pp. 919-928 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Marciani ◽  
Richard Faulks ◽  
Martin S. J. Wickham ◽  
Debbie Bush ◽  
Barbara Pick ◽  
...  

Fat is often included in common foods as an emulsion of dispersed oil droplets to enhance the organoleptic quality and stability. The intragastric acid stability of emulsified fat may impact on gastric emptying, satiety and plasma lipid absorption. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether, compared with an acid-unstable emulsion, an acid-stable fat emulsion would empty from the stomach more slowly, cause more rapid plasma lipid absorption and cause greater satiety. Eleven healthy male volunteers received on two separate occasions 500 ml of 15 % (w/w) [13C]palmitate-enriched olive oil-in-water emulsion meals which were either stable or unstable in the acid gastric environment. MRI was used to measure gastric emptying and the intragastric oil fraction of the meals. Blood sampling was used to measure plasma lipids and visual analogue scales were used to assess satiety. The acid-unstable fat emulsion broke and rapidly layered in the stomach. Gastric emptying of meal volume was slower for the acid-stable fat emulsion (P < 0·0001; two-way ANOVA). The rate of energy delivery of fat from the stomach to the duodenum was not different up to t = 110 min. The acid-stable emulsion induced increased fullness (P < 0·05), decreased hunger (P < 0·0002), decreased appetite (P < 0·0001) and increased the concentration of palmitic acid tracer in the chylomicron fraction (P < 0·04). This shows that it is possible to delay gastric emptying and increase satiety by stabilising the intragastric distribution of fat emulsions against the gastric acid environment. This could have implications for the design of novel foods.


2003 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. A581 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Marciani ◽  
Martin Wickham ◽  
Jeff Wright ◽  
Debbie Bush ◽  
Richard Faulks ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 95 (2) ◽  
pp. 331-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Marciani ◽  
Martin S. J. Wickham ◽  
Debbie Bush ◽  
Richard Faulks ◽  
Jeff Wright ◽  
...  

Pre-processed foods often contain a high percentage of lipid, present as emulsions stabilised with various surface-active agents. The acidic gastric environment can affect the behaviour of such emulsions, modifying the lipid spatial distribution and, in turn, the rate of gastric emptying and nutrient delivery to the gut. The aim of the present study was to use echo-planar magnetic resonance imaging (EPI) to determine the behaviour of model olive oil emulsions during gastric processing. Six healthy male volunteers were intubated nasogastrically on two separate occasions and fed 500ml 15% (w/w) olive oil-in-water, surfactant-stabilised emulsions designed to have identical droplet size distribution and which were either stable or unstable under gastric acid conditions. EPI was used to assess the oil fraction of the intragastric emulsions, gastric emptying and to visualise the spatial distribution of the oil at 10, 30 and 50min postprandially. The in vivo imaging measurements of the oil volume fraction of the emulsions correlated well (r 0·66, acid-stable; r 0·52, acid-unstable) with that assayed in the gastric aspirates. Compared with the acid-stable emulsion, the acid-unstable emulsion in the gastric lumen rapidly separated into lipid-depleted ‘aqueous’ and lipid layers. Phase separation in the acid-unstable meal allowed the oil-depleted component to empty first and more rapidly than the stable emulsion as determined by the gastric emptying curves. These pilot data suggest that gastric processing and emptying of high-fat foods could be manipulated by careful choice of emulsifier.


2007 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 1325-1336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tianmin Jiang ◽  
George Hirasaki ◽  
Clarence Miller ◽  
Kevin Moran ◽  
Marc Fleury

Author(s):  
Alla Nesterenko ◽  
Audrey Drelich ◽  
Huiling Lu ◽  
Danièle Clausse ◽  
Isabelle Pezron

2004 ◽  
Vol 22 (SI - Chem. Reactions in Foods V) ◽  
pp. S177-S178
Author(s):  
M. Veselá

A process of amaranth seed grinding followed by extraction was studied. For fat emulsion stability impairment the enzyme G-Zyme<sup>®</sup>G999 was used. Using this process the improved fat separation was achieved.


1956 ◽  
Vol 187 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. C. Meng ◽  
Hertha Cress ◽  
John B. Youmans

Intravenous administration of a 10% olive oil emulsion or lymph to healthy dogs anesthetized with Nembutal produced marked thrombocytopenia, leucopenia, neutropenia, eosinopenia, lymphopenia, increase in mechanical fragility of erythrocytes, and increase in hematocrit. The increase in mechanical fragility of erythrocytes correlated directly with the degree of lipemia. Heparin administration accelerated the removal of the injected fat from the circulation and hastened the return to normal of the formed blood elements. The changes in the formed blood elements were more marked and persisted longer in the dogs receiving piromen. The changes in the formed blood elements following oral ingestion of olive oil were either mild or insignificant except for the moderate eosinophilia. Elevation of rectal temperature and persistent lymphopenia were observed only in the animals receiving emulsion and piromen. It is concluded that the changes in formed blood elements, including the increase in mechanical fragility of erythrocytes following intravenous administration of fat emulsion, did not seem to correlate with the rise of body temperature.


2000 ◽  
Vol 94 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 9
Author(s):  
Pius Hildebrand ◽  
Lukas P. Degen ◽  
Annette Collet ◽  
Livio Rossi ◽  
Fuping Peng ◽  
...  

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