Hugo Toledo-Alvarado’s research while affiliated with National Autonomous University of Mexico and other places

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Publications (1)


Supplementation with antioxidants and phenolic compounds in ruminant feeding and its effect on dairy products: a systematic review
  • Literature Review
  • Full-text available

September 2023

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104 Reads

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5 Citations

Journal of Dairy Research

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Hugo Toledo-Alvarado

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Milk and dairy products have great importance in human nutrition related to the presence of different nutrients, including protein, fatty acid profile and bioactive compounds. Dietary supplementation with foods containing these types of compounds may influence the chemical composition of milk and dairy products and hence, potentially, the consumer. Our objective was to summarize the evidence of the effect of supplementation with antioxidants and phenolic compounds in the diets of dairy animals and their effects on milk and dairy products. We conducted a systematic search in the MEDLINE/PubMed database for studies published up until July 2022 that reported on supplementation with antioxidants and phenolic compounds in diets that included plants, herbs, seeds, grains and isolated bioactive compounds of dairy animals such as cows, sheep and goats and their effects on milk and dairy products. Of the 94 studies identified in the search, only 15 met the inclusion criteria and were analyzed. The review revealed that supplementation with false flax cake, sweet grass, Acacia farnesiana, mushroom myceliated grains and sweet grass promoted an effect on the milk lipid profile, whereas supplementation with dried grape pomace and tannin extract promoted an effect on the milk and cheese lipid profiles. In six studies, the addition of Acacia farnesiana, hesperidin or naringin, durum wheat bran, mushroom myceliated grains, dried grape pomace and olive leaves increased the antioxidant activity of milk. In conclusion, supplementation with bioactive compounds had a positive impact which ranged from an increase in antioxidant capacity to a decrease in oxidative biomarkers such as malondialdehyde.

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Citations (1)


... Innosa et al. [6] also reported a lower MDA amount in cheese obtained from goats fed a dietary olive leaf supplementation. The presence of bioactive compounds such as phenols, carotenoids, and tocopherols in olive leaves increased the antioxidant capacity in milk with a subsequent transfer to the cheese [25]. Moreover, the level of MDA in our cheeses was very low (reaching a maximum of 0.11 mg MDA/kg cheese at 60 days of ripening) probably because even the cheese from sheep without olive leaf integration showed good oxidative stability due to bioactive compounds obtained from grazing. ...

Reference:

Effect of Dietary Olive Leaf Integration on Qualitative Characteristics of Sheep Cheese During Ripening
Supplementation with antioxidants and phenolic compounds in ruminant feeding and its effect on dairy products: a systematic review

Journal of Dairy Research