Blood plasma and liver lipids of rats fed physically refined and re-refined palm oil

Physically-refined palm oil (PRPO) and palm oil after further chemical refining (chemically-refined palm oil, CRPO) were included in the diet of rats and the effects on plasma and liver lipids were studied and compared. No differences in body weight gain or organ weights were observed as between the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Teruo Miyazawa, T., Rebhung, T., Fujimoto, K., Kaneda, T.
Format: Journal Contribution
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:http://agris.upm.edu.my:8080/dspace/handle/0/6100
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Summary:Physically-refined palm oil (PRPO) and palm oil after further chemical refining (chemically-refined palm oil, CRPO) were included in the diet of rats and the effects on plasma and liver lipids were studied and compared. No differences in body weight gain or organ weights were observed as between the rats fed the PRPO and the CRPO diets for two months. Differences in plasma total cholesterol and phospholipid content as between the rats fed the PRPO diet and those fed the CRPO diet were not evident. Liver total cholesterol, phospholipid, phosphatidylcholine hydroperoxide, phosphatidylethanolamine peroxide and alfa-tocopherol contents were also not significantly different as between the rats on the two diets. Liver and plasma triglyceride levels did differ between rats on the two palm oil diets, however. The results show that differences between the dietary effects of PRPO and CRPO on the tissue lipid profiles in the rats were relatively small