Addition of gluten values to a food and nutrient database

•A useful approach for other database developers to add gluten values to food and nutrient database.•Gluten values added to Nutrition Coordinating Center Food and Nutrient Database.•Gluten in food due to cross-contamination will not be ascertained by the approach used. Gluten is a protein found in w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of food composition and analysis 2020-01, Vol.85, p.103330, Article 103330
Hauptverfasser: Jasthi, Bhaskarani, Pettit, Janet, Harnack, Lisa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A useful approach for other database developers to add gluten values to food and nutrient database.•Gluten values added to Nutrition Coordinating Center Food and Nutrient Database.•Gluten in food due to cross-contamination will not be ascertained by the approach used. Gluten is a protein found in wheat, rye, barley, and their crossbred varieties and derivatives. It is responsible for triggering hypersensitivity reactions in people with celiac disease, and research is underway to determine whether it may contribute to other health outcomes. The objective of the study was to add gluten values to the University of Minnesota Nutrition Coordinating Center (NCC) Food and Nutrient Database so that researchers conducting studies related to gluten may assess intake of this food component. Gluten values were assigned to foods in the NCC Food and Nutrient Database using imputation procedures based on two assumptions. The first is that foods that do not include any wheat, rye, or barley grain ingredients or their derivatives are presumed to contain 0 grams of gluten. Thus, foods such as fruits, vegetables, and vegetable oils were assigned gluten values of 0 grams. The second is that a specified fraction of protein found in wheat, rye, barley and their crossbred varieties and derivatives (0.75) is presumed to be gluten. A factor of 0.75 was selected based on findings from studies in which chemical analysis of some gluten - containing grains and their derivatives were carried out to estimate the percentage of gluten. It is important to note that gluten values in the NCC Database may not be appropriate for use in determining whether a food or diet is gluten-free because foods with “zero” values may not meet the FDA definition of gluten-free (
ISSN:0889-1575
1096-0481
DOI:10.1016/j.jfca.2019.103330