Artigo Revisado por pares

Tocopherol, tocotrienol and plant sterol contents of vegetable oils and industrial fats

2007; Elsevier BV; Volume: 21; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.jfca.2007.07.012

ISSN

1096-0481

Autores

Heidi Schwartz, Velimatti Ollilainen, Vieno Piironen, Anna‐Maija Lampi,

Tópico(s)

Edible Oils Quality and Analysis

Resumo

The tocopherol and tocotrienol (i.e. tocol) and plant sterol contents of 14 vegetable and 9 industrial fats and oils available on the Finnish market in 2005 were determined using NP-HPLC with fluorescence detection (tocols) and GC-FID (plant sterols). Best sources of α-tocopherol were wheat germ (192 mg/100 g) and sunflower oil (59 mg/100 g). Oils richest in γ-tocopherol were camelina (72 mg/100 g), linseed (52 mg/100 g) and organic rapeseed oil (51 mg/100 g). Total tocol contents were between 4.2 mg/100 g (coconut fat) and 268 mg/100 g (wheat germ oil). Plant sterol contents ranged from 69 mg/100 g in a frying fat to 4240 mg/100 g in wheat germ oil. Organic rapeseed oil, the second best source of plant sterols, contained 887 mg/100 g. The variations of the total tocol and sterol contents in 10 rapeseed oil sub-samples analysed separately were 9.7% for tocols and 9.9% for sterols in refined rapeseed oil, and 6.3% for tocols and 4.2% for sterols, respectively, in cold-pressed rapeseed oil. In addition to the target compounds, plastochromanol-8 could be determined in all plant-based samples with contents ranging from 0.13 (walnut oil) to 18 mg/100 g (linseed oil). The lignans sesamin and sesamolin could be identified in sesame oil.

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