Prayson Brigid E, McMahon James T, Prayson Richard A
Laurel School.
Ann Diagn Pathol. 2008 Apr;12(2):98-102. doi: 10.1016/j.anndiagpath.2007.04.012. Epub 2007 Oct 24.
Americans consume billions of hotdogs per year resulting in more than a billion dollars in retail sales. Package labels typically list some type of meat as the primary ingredient. The purpose of this study is to assess the meat and water content of several hotdog brands to determine if the package labels are accurate. Eight brands of hotdogs were evaluated for water content by weight. A variety of routine techniques in surgical pathology including routine light microscopy with hematoxylin-eosin-stained sections, special staining, immunohistochemistry, and electron microscopy were used to assess for meat content and for other recognizable components. Package labels indicated that the top-listed ingredient in all 8 brands was meat; the second listed ingredient was water (n = 6) and another type of meat (n = 2). Water comprised 44% to 69% (median, 57%) of the total weight. Meat content determined by microscopic cross-section analysis ranged from 2.9% to 21.2% (median, 5.7%). The cost per hotdog ($0.12-$0.42) roughly correlated with meat content. A variety of tissues were observed besides skeletal muscle including bone (n = 8), collagen (n = 8), blood vessels (n = 8), plant material (n = 8), peripheral nerve (n = 7), adipose (n = 5), cartilage (n = 4), and skin (n = 1). Glial fibrillary acidic protein immunostaining was not observed in any of the hotdogs. Lipid content on oil red O staining was graded as moderate in 3 hotdogs and marked in 5 hotdogs. Electron microscopy showed recognizable skeletal muscle with evidence of degenerative changes. In conclusion, hotdog ingredient labels are misleading; most brands are more than 50% water by weight. The amount of meat (skeletal muscle) in most brands comprised less than 10% of the cross-sectional surface area. More expensive brands generally had more meat. All hotdogs contained other tissue types (bone and cartilage) not related to skeletal muscle; brain tissue was not present.
美国人每年消费数十亿根热狗,零售额超过十亿美元。包装标签通常将某种肉类列为主要成分。本研究的目的是评估几个热狗品牌的肉类和水分含量,以确定包装标签是否准确。对八个热狗品牌的水分重量含量进行了评估。采用了外科病理学中的多种常规技术,包括苏木精-伊红染色切片的常规光学显微镜检查、特殊染色、免疫组织化学和电子显微镜检查,以评估肉类含量和其他可识别成分。包装标签显示,所有八个品牌中列出的首要成分都是肉类;列出的第二种成分是水(n = 6)和另一种肉类(n = 2)。水占总重量的44%至69%(中位数为57%)。通过显微镜横截面分析确定的肉类含量在2.9%至21.2%之间(中位数为5.7%)。每个热狗的成本(0.12美元至0.42美元)大致与肉类含量相关。除骨骼肌外,还观察到了多种组织,包括骨骼(n = 8)、胶原蛋白(n = 8)、血管(n = 8)、植物材料(n = 8)、外周神经(n = 7)、脂肪(n = 5)、软骨(n = 4)和皮肤(n = 1)。在任何热狗中均未观察到胶质纤维酸性蛋白免疫染色。油红O染色的脂质含量在3个热狗中为中等程度,在5个热狗中为明显程度。电子显微镜显示出可识别的骨骼肌,并伴有退行性改变的证据。总之,热狗成分标签具有误导性;大多数品牌按重量计算水分含量超过50%。大多数品牌的肉类(骨骼肌)含量占横截面面积不到10%。价格较高的品牌通常肉类含量更高。所有热狗都含有与骨骼肌无关的其他组织类型(骨骼和软骨);不存在脑组织。