Real-World Evaluation of Lipid Oxidation Products and Trace Metals in French Fries From Two Chain Fast-Food Restaurants

Date

2021-02-05

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

2296-861X

Volume Title

Publisher

Frontiers

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Differences in lipid oxidation products (LOPs) and trace metal concentrations of French fry samples found between two global chain fast-food restaurants in the UK were investigated using high-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) and inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES) analyses, respectively, of extracts derived therefrom. Over the course of 3 days and 3 different diurnal time periods, samples of French fries (FFs) were analyzed, and comparisons of two different oil extraction methods were undertaken for the two restaurants involved. The magnitude of concentrations of LOPs extracted from FFs is discussed. Significant differences between 6/7 aldehyde classifications, and aluminum, manganese, vanadium, lead, iron, copper and nickel levels between samples from the two restaurants are also reported. Redox-active transition and further trace metal concentrations inversely correlated with FF oil sample LOP contents; this suggested an antioxidant rather than a pro-oxidant role for them.

Description

The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link. Open access article

Keywords

aldehydes, legislated metals, lipid oxidation products, French fries, proton nuclear magnetic resonance, fast-food restaurants

Citation

Le Gresley, A., Ampem, G., De Mars, S., Grootveld, M. and Naughton, D.P. (2021) Real-World” Evaluation of Lipid Oxidation Products and Trace Metals in French Fries From Two Chain Fast-Food Restaurants. Frontiers in Nutrition. 8, 620952.

Rights

Research Institute