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Showing papers on "Docosenoic Acid published in 1981"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: One sample of canola seed and five samples of screenings were commercially processed to yield first an “expeller oil” and subsequently an "extractor oil" by the hexane extraction of the residue and the fatty acids and sterols appear to be nutritionally useful and innocuous in all respects.
Abstract: One sample of canola seed (variety Tower) and five samples of screenings were commercially processed to yield first an “expeller oil” and subsequently an “extractor oil” by the hexane extraction of the residue. The screening samples contained 25–50% intact or broken canola seed. The balance included 21–31% weed seeds (especially lambsquarter and stinkweed), hulls, fragments of the embryo, and chaff. All the oil samples were analyzed for sterol and fatty acid composition. The extractor screening samples had slightly higher sterol contents than the corresponding expeller samples, while the Tower samples gave the lowest values. The averages (in mg/g oil or extract) for the extractor screening samples were: brassicasterol, 1.0; campesterol, 4.1; and β-sitosterol, 7.3. For expeller screening samples the average were: 0.9, 3.6 and 6.2 and for the Tower oils they were, respectively, 0.9, 3.8, 5.3 and 0.9, 3.5, 4.7. The fatty acid compositions of the screening samples for both extractor and expeller oils were similar to that of the Tower oil except for the higher proportions of docosenoic acid (22:1) and eicosenoic acid (20:1) and the more obvious presence of three C18 conjugated dienes totalling up to 0.6% of one screening oil sample. The docosenoic acid level (mainly erucic acid) ranged from 3.0 to 7.0% for the extractor oils and from 2.5 to 8.0% for the expeller samples, compared to 0.1% for the two Tower oils. The oil contents of the screenings ranged from 20 to 30%, and the fatty acids and sterols appear to be nutritionally useful and innocuous in all respects.

16 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Weanling male rats were fed calcium-deprived diets containing 15% lipids, of which half is cis- or trans-docosenoic acid, for 5, 12 or 28 days, and brassidic acid induced a greater triglyceride accumulation than erucic acid did.
Abstract: Weanling male rats were fed calcium-deprived diets containing 15% lipids, of which half is cis- or trans -docosenoic acid, for 5, 12 or 28 days. Elaidic or oleic a

1 citations