Food Chemistry: X (Jun 2024)

How long can you store vitamins? Stability of tocopherols and tocotrienol during different storage conditions in broccoli and blueberries

  • Irmela Sarvan,
  • Anton Jürgensen,
  • Matthias Greiner,
  • Oliver Lindtner

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22
p. 101444

Abstract

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Differences between the stability of α-, β-, γ-, and δ-tocopherol as well α-tocotrienol stored at −20 °C and −80 °C were studied in broccoli and blueberry samples. Before storage up to 28 days, they underwent different initializing processes such as freezing quickly with liquid nitrogen and freeze-drying, followed by homogenization. While α-tocopherol levels in blueberries did not significantly differ, levels in broccoli were substantially higher after homogenization of freeze-dried samples compared to fresh broccoli samples. This might be caused by higher extractability of α-tocopherol from the changed cell structure. Storage of fresh broccoli samples at −20 °C led to decreasing α-tocopherol levels. Nevertheless, the deviation between freeze-dried samples to the initial fresh samples and fresh samples frozen with liquid nitrogen stored at −20 °C for 7 days were in the same order of magnitude. In conclusion, storage up to 7 days for vitamin relevant samples before analysis seemed to be justifiable.

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