Authors
Sun Jin Hur, Beong Ou Lim, Eric A Decker, D Julian McClements
Publication date
2011/3/1
Source
Food chemistry
Volume
125
Issue
1
Pages
1-12
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
In vitro digestion models are widely used to study the structural changes, digestibility, and release of food components under simulated gastrointestinal conditions. However, the results of in vitro digestion models are often different to those found using in vivo models because of the difficulties in accurately simulating the highly complex physicochemical and physiological events occurring in animal and human digestive tracts. This paper provides an overview of current trends in the development and utilisation of in vitro digestion models for foods, as well as information that can be used to develop improved digestion models. Our survey of in vitro digestion models found that the most predominant food samples tested were plants, meats, fish, dairy, and emulsion-based foods. The most frequently used biological molecules included in the digestion models were digestive enzymes (pancreatin, pepsin, trypsin …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SJ Hur, BO Lim, EA Decker, DJ McClements - Food chemistry, 2011