Isoflavonoid Content of Hong Kong Soy Foods

Progress in understanding the effects of dietary soy isoflavones on chronic disease prevention in the Hong Kong Chinese population has been hampered by the lack of a comprehensive soy isoflavone database. In this study, we determined the concentrations and distribution of isoflavones in 47 foods inc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2009-06, Vol.57 (12), p.5386-5390
Hauptverfasser: Chan, Sieu G, Murphy, Patricia A, Ho, Suzanne C, Kreiger, Nancy, Darlington, Gerarda, So, Edwin K. F, Chong, Portia Y. Y
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container_end_page 5390
container_issue 12
container_start_page 5386
container_title Journal of agricultural and food chemistry
container_volume 57
creator Chan, Sieu G
Murphy, Patricia A
Ho, Suzanne C
Kreiger, Nancy
Darlington, Gerarda
So, Edwin K. F
Chong, Portia Y. Y
description Progress in understanding the effects of dietary soy isoflavones on chronic disease prevention in the Hong Kong Chinese population has been hampered by the lack of a comprehensive soy isoflavone database. In this study, we determined the concentrations and distribution of isoflavones in 47 foods included in a soy food frequency questionnaire by reverse-phase HPLC. Results indicated that most soy products contained isoflavones ranging from 1 mg of aglucon equivalents/100 g of wet weight (bean strip noodle and egg bean curd) to 80 mg of aglucon equivalents/100 g of wet weight (oyster sauce soybean and sweet bean curd sheet). Among our food groups, mean isoflavone concentrations were lowest in the soy milk group (9.99 mg of aglucon equivalents/100 g of wet weight) and highest in the bean curd skin group (40 mg of aglucon equivalents/100 g of wet weight). The conjugation patterns of isoflavones varied within and between food groups as influenced by the types of soybeans and the processing or cooking techniques used. The isoflavone concentrations reported herein will be useful for ascertaining the relationship between exposure to dietary soy isoflavones and health effects in the Chinese population.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/jf803870k
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source ACS Publications; MEDLINE
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Chemical Composition of Foods/Feeds
Food Analysis
Food industries
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Hong Kong
Isoflavones - analysis
Soy Foods - analysis
Soybean Proteins
title Isoflavonoid Content of Hong Kong Soy Foods
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