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Research Publications (Food Safety)

This page tracks research articles published in national and international peer-reviewed journals. Recent articles are available ahead of print and searchable by Journal, Article Title, and Category. Research publications are tracked across six categories: Bacterial Pathogens, Chemical Contaminants, Natural Toxins, Parasites, Produce Safety, and Viruses. Articles produced by USDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) and FDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) are also tracked in Scopus.

Displaying 201 - 225 of 387

  1. The use of molecular markers in the verification of fish and seafood authenticity and the detection of adulteration

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety, EarlyView. The verification of authenticity and detection of food mislabeling are elements that have been of high importance for centuries. During the last few decades there has been an increasing consumer demand for the verification of food identity and the implementation of stricter controls around these matters.

  2. The sensory properties and metabolic impact of natural and synthetic sweeteners

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • The global rise in obesity, type II diabetes, and other metabolic disorders in recent years has been attributed in part to the overconsumption of added sugars. Sugar reduction strategies often rely on synthetic and naturally occurring sweetening compounds to achieve their goals, with popular synthetic sweeteners including saccharin, cyclamate, acesulfame potassium, aspartame, sucralose, neotame, alitame, and advantame.

  3. Colloidal structure of honey and its influence on antibacterial activity

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Honey colloidal structure emerges as a new trend in research on honey functions since it became recognized as a major factor altering bioactivity of honey compounds. In honey complex matrix, macromolecules self‐associate to colloidal particles at the critical concentration, driven by honey viscosity. Sequestration of macromolecules into colloids changes their activities and affects honey antibacterial function. This review fills the 80‐year‐old gap in research on honey colloidal structure.

  4. Tempeh: A semicentennial review on its health benefits, fermentation, safety, processing, sustainability, and affordability

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Tempeh is a fermented food made of mainly soybeans and is a nutritious, affordable, and sustainable functional source of protein. Globally, tempeh is a widely accepted fermented product. Although there is a growing body of literature on tempeh, most research has focused on unfermented soybeans, thus the impact of tempeh fermentation on biological properties of soybeans has been largely left scattered.

  5. Prolamin‐based complexes: Structure design and food‐related applications

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Prolamins are a group of safe food additives that are biocompatible, biodegradable, and sustainable. Zein, gliadin, kafirin, and hordein are common prolamins that have been extensively studied, particularly as these form colloidal particles because of their amphiphilic properties.

  6. Comparison of requirements for using health claims on foods in the European Union, the USA, Canada, and Australia/New Zealand

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Nutrition is recognized as one of the leading factors influencing the growing incidence of noncommunicable diseases. Despite society experiencing a global rise in obesity, specific populations remain at risk of nutrient deficiencies. The food industry can use health claims to inform consumers about the health benefits of foods through labeling and the broader promotion of specific food products.

  7. Phytic acid and its interactions: Contributions to protein functionality, food processing, and safety

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Is phytic acid (IP6) an undesirable constituent for vegetables and foods? This question is getting harder to answer. Phytic acid contributes to mineral/protein deficiency, but also brings about potential physiological benefits. Both the positive and negative effects boil down to the interactions among IP6, metal ions, and biopolymers.

  8. Current status of biobased and biodegradable food packaging materials: Impact on food quality and effect of innovative processing technologies

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Fossil‐based plastic materials are an integral part of modern life. In food packaging, plastics have a highly important function in preserving food quality and safety, ensuring adequate shelf life, and thereby contributing to limiting food waste. Meanwhile, the global stream of plastics into the oceans is increasing exponentially, triggering worldwide concerns for the environment.

  9. Standardized methods for testing the quality attributes of plant‐based foods: Milk and cream alternatives

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • The food industry is creating a diverse range of plant‐based alternatives to dairy products, such as milks, creams, yogurts, and cheeses due to the increasing demand from consumers for more sustainable, healthy, and ethical products. These dairy alternatives are often designed to mimic the desirable physicochemical, functional, and sensory properties of real dairy products, such as their appearance, texture, mouthfeel, flavor, and shelf‐life.

  10. Ultrasound‐assisted extraction and modification of plant‐based proteins: Impact on physicochemical, functional, and nutritional properties

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Ultrasonication is a green technology that has recently received an enormous research attention for extraction of plant‐based proteins and tailoring the functionalities of these ingredients. Ultrasonication is generally used as a pretreatment method in the conventional protein solubilization protocols because it can break the cell matrix to improve the extractability.

  11. New perspective toward nutritional support for malnourished cancer patients: Role of lipids

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • To improve the difficulties related to malnutrition, nutritional support has become an essential part of multidisciplinary comprehensive treatment for cancer. Lipids are essential nutrient source for the human body, and nowadays in clinical practices, it has a positive interventional effect on patients suffering from cancer. However, contribution of lipids in nutritional support of cancer patients is still poorly understood.

  12. Microstructures of encapsulates and their relations with encapsulation efficiency and controlled release of bioactive constituents: A review

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Vitamins, peptides, essential oils, and probiotics are examples of health beneficial constituents, which are nevertheless heat‐sensitive and possess poor chemical stability. Various encapsulation methods have been applied to protect these constituents against thermal and chemical degradations.

  13. Activity and bioavailability of food protein‐derived angiotensin‐I‐converting enzyme–inhibitory peptides

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Angiotensin‐I‐converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitory peptides are able to inhibit the activity of ACE, which is the key enzymatic factor mediating systemic hypertension. ACE‐inhibitory peptides can be obtained from edible proteins and have the function of antihypertension. The amino acid sequences and the secondary structures of ACE‐inhibitory peptides determine the inhibitory activities and stability.

  14. Determination of antibiotics in meat samples using analytical methodologies: A review

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Antibiotics are widely used to prevent or treat some diseases in human and veterinary medicine and also as animal growth promoters. The presence of these compounds in foods derived from food‐producing animals can be a risk for human health. Consequently, regulatory agencies have set maximum residue limits for antibiotics in food samples. Therefore, the development of novel methodologies for its determination in food samples is required.

  15. Milk proteins and their derived peptides on bone health: Biological functions, mechanisms, and prospects

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Antibiotics are widely used to prevent or treat some diseases in human and veterinary medicine and also as animal growth promoters. The presence of these compounds in foods derived from food‐producing animals can be a risk for human health. Consequently, regulatory agencies have set maximum residue limits for antibiotics in food samples. Therefore, the development of novel methodologies for its determination in food samples is required.

  16. Analytical chemistry, formation, mitigation, and risk assessment of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons: From food processing to in vivo metabolic transformation

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are ubiquitous in the air, oils, water, and food products we encounter every day. Among these exposures, food consumption is a major route of PAH exposure for nonsmokers. The PAH dietary exposure levels vary among different countries; however, many studies have shown PAH exposure to be highly concerning to human health.

      • Chemical contaminants
  17. Legume proteins are smart carriers to encapsulate hydrophilic and hydrophobic bioactive compounds and probiotic bacteria: A review

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Encapsulation is a promising technological process enabling the protection of bioactive compounds against harsh storage, processing, and gastrointestinal tract (GIT) conditions. Legume proteins (LPs) are unique carriers that can efficiently encapsulate these unstable and highly reactive ingredients. Stable LPs‐based microcapsules loaded with active ingredients can thus develop to be embedded into processed functional foods.

  18. Histamine accumulation in dairy products: Microbial causes, techniques for the detection of histamine‐producing microbiota, and potential solutions

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Histamine poisoning is a significant public health and safety concern. Intoxication from ingestion of food containing high amounts of histamine may cause mild or severe symptoms that can even culminate in cardiac arrest. Nonetheless, although histamine levels in dairy products are not subject to any regulation, important outbreaks and severe adverse health effects have been reported due to intake of dairy products with a high histamine content, especially ripened cheeses.

  19. A review of microbes and chemical contaminants in dairy products in sub‐Saharan Africa

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Animal milk types in sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA) are processed into varieties of products using different traditional methods and are widely consumed by households to support nutritional intake and diet. Dairy products contain several microorganisms, their metabolites, and other chemical compounds, some with health benefits and many others considered as potential health hazards. Consumption of contaminated milk products could have serious health implications for consumers.

  20. NMR spectroscopy in wine authentication: An official control perspective

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Wine authentication is vital in identifying malpractice and fraud, and various physical and chemical analytical techniques have been employed for this purpose. Besides wet chemistry, these include chromatography, isotopic ratio mass spectrometry, optical spectroscopy, and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, which have been applied in recent years in combination with chemometric approaches.

  21. Craft beer: An overview

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • The purpose of the work was to provide an overview on craft beer. Details and issues concerning history and legal definition market, fiscal policy, innovation, safety, healthiness, consumer profile, and sustainability are supplied.

  22. Emerging forward osmosis and membrane distillation for liquid food concentration: A review

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • As emerging membrane technologies, forward osmosis (FO) and membrane distillation (MD), which work with novel driving forces, show great potential for liquid food concentration, owing to their low fouling propensity and great driving force. In the last decades, they have attracted the attention of food industry scientists in global scope. However, discussions of the FO and MD in liquid food concentration advancement, membrane fouling, and economic assessment have been scant.

  23. Pulse seeds as promising and sustainable source of ingredients with naturally bioencapsulated nutrients: Literature review and outlook

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Pulse seeds are nutritious and sustainable matrices with a high level of intrinsic microstructural complexity. They contain high‐quality plant‐based protein and substantial amounts of slowly digestible starch and dietary fiber. Starch and protein in pulses are located inside cotyledon cells that survive cooking and subsequent mechanical disintegration, hence preserving natural nutrient bioencapsulation.

  24. Looking forward in 2021

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety, Volume 20, Issue 1, Page 2-2, January 2021.

  25. An overview of the perception and mitigation of astringency associated with phenolic compounds

    • Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety
    • Astringency, as a kind of puckering, drying, or rough sensation, is widely perceived from natural foods, especially plants rich in phenolic compounds. Although the interaction and precipitation of salivary proteins by phenolic compounds was often believed as the major mechanism of astringency, a definitive theory about astringency is still lacking due to the complex oral sensations.