Co-delivery of hydrophobic curcumin and hydrophilic catechin by a water-in-oil-in-water double emulsion

•WOW emulsion was fabricated using two-step emulsification method.•Hydrophilic catechin and hydrophobic curcumin was encapsulated in WOW emulsion.•Encapsulating catechin and curcumin increased significantly stability in SGF.•Encapsulating catechin and curcumin increased bioaccessibility up to 4 fold...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food chemistry 2015-04, Vol.173, p.7-13
Hauptverfasser: Aditya, N.P., Aditya, Sheetal, Yang, Hanjoo, Kim, Hye Won, Park, Sung Ook, Ko, Sanghoon
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•WOW emulsion was fabricated using two-step emulsification method.•Hydrophilic catechin and hydrophobic curcumin was encapsulated in WOW emulsion.•Encapsulating catechin and curcumin increased significantly stability in SGF.•Encapsulating catechin and curcumin increased bioaccessibility up to 4 fold. Curcumin and catechin are naturally occurring phytochemicals with extreme sensitivity to oxidation and low bioavailability. We fabricated a water-in-oil-in-water (W/O/W) double emulsion encapsulating hydrophilic catechin and hydrophobic curcumin simultaneously. The co-loaded emulsion was fabricated using a two-step emulsification method, and its physicochemical properties were characterised. Volume-weighted mean size (d43) of emulsion droplets was ≈3.88μm for blank emulsions, whereas it decreased to ≈2.8–3.0μm for curcumin and/or catechin-loaded emulsions, which was attributed to their capacity to act as emulsifiers. High entrapment efficiency was observed for curcumin and/or catechin-loaded emulsions (88–97%). Encapsulation of catechin and curcumin within an emulsion increased their stability significantly in simulated gastrointestinal fluid, which resulted in a four-fold augmentation in their bioaccessibility compared to that of freely suspended curcumin and catechin solutions. Co-loading of curcumin and catechin did not have adverse effects on either compound’s stability or bioaccessibility.
ISSN:0308-8146
1873-7072
DOI:10.1016/j.foodchem.2014.09.131