Satchithanandam Subramaniam, Oles Carolyn J, Spease Carol J, Brandt Mary M, Yurawecz Martin P, Rader Jeanne I
Division of Research and Applied Technology, Office of Nutritional Products, Labeling and Dietary Supplements, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, College Park, Maryland 20740, USA.
Lipids. 2004 Jan;39(1):11-8. doi: 10.1007/s11745-004-1195-5.
On July 11, 2003, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration published a final rule amending its food-labeling regulations to require that trans FA be declared in the nutrition label of conventional foods and dietary supplements. The effective date of this final rule is January 1, 2006. This places some urgency on increasing the number and types of currently available foods for which there are trans-fat data. Compositional databases on trans fat content of food are currently limited. The purpose of this study was to determine the trans-fat content of a wide range of foods prior to the effective date of the new regulation. AOAC Official Method of Analysis 996.01 was modified for the analysis of trans fat in noncereal products. Food products for analysis were selected on the basis of market share and data from the USDA's 1994-1996 Continuing Survey of Food Intake by Individuals. Foods were purchased from local supermarkets, weighed, hydrolyzed, converted to FAME, and analyzed by GC. The results showed that trans fat (g/100 g fat) ranged from 0.0 to 48.8 in bread, cake, and related products; from 14.9 to 27.7 in margarines; from 7.7 to 35.3 in cookies and crackers; from 24.7 to 38.2 in frozen potatoes; from 0.0 to 17.1 in salty snacks; from 0.0 to 13.2 in vegetable oils and shortenings; from 0.0 to 2.2 in salad dressings and mayonnaises; and from 0.0 to 2.0 in dry breakfast cereals. Serving sizes for the foods included in this survey ranged from 12 to 161 g, and trans-fat levels ranged from 0.0 to 7.2 g/serving. The significant differences in trans-fat content in products within each food category are due to differences in the type of fats and oils used in the manufacturing processes.
2003年7月11日,美国食品药品监督管理局发布了一项最终规定,修订其食品标签法规,要求在传统食品和膳食补充剂的营养标签中声明反式脂肪酸。该最终规定的生效日期为2006年1月1日。这使得增加目前有反式脂肪数据的食品数量和种类变得有些紧迫。目前关于食品反式脂肪含量的成分数据库有限。本研究的目的是在新规定生效日期之前确定多种食品的反式脂肪含量。对AOAC官方分析方法996.01进行了修改,用于分析非谷物产品中的反式脂肪。根据市场份额和美国农业部1994 - 1996年个人食物摄入量持续调查的数据选择用于分析的食品。从当地超市购买食品,称重,水解,转化为脂肪酸甲酯,然后用气相色谱法进行分析。结果表明,面包、蛋糕及相关产品中的反式脂肪(克/100克脂肪)范围为0.0至48.8;人造黄油中为14.9至27.7;饼干和薄脆饼干中为7.7至35.3;冷冻土豆中为24.7至38.2;咸味小吃中为0.0至17.1;植物油和起酥油中为0.0至13.2;沙拉酱和蛋黄酱中为0.0至2.2;干早餐谷物中为0.0至2.0。本次调查中所包含食品的每份食用量范围为12至161克,反式脂肪含量范围为0.0至7.2克/份。每个食品类别中产品的反式脂肪含量存在显著差异,这是由于制造过程中使用的油脂类型不同所致。