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1.
Food Res Int ; 181: 114098, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38448107

ABSTRACT

Quantitative changes at different length scales (molecular, microscopic, and macroscopic levels) during cooking were evaluated to better understand the cooking behavior of common beans. The microstructural evolution of presoaked fresh and aged red kidney beans during cooking at 95 °C was quantified using light microscopy coupled with image analysis. These data were related to macroscopic properties, being hardness and volume changes representing texture and swelling of the beans during cooking. Microstructural properties included the cell area (Acell), the fraction of intercellular spaces (%Ais), and the fraction of starch area within the cells (%As/c), reflecting respectively cell expansion, cell separation, and starch swelling. A strong linear correlation between hardness and %Ais (r = -0.886, p = 0.07), along with a significant relative change in %Ais (∼5 times), suggests that softening is predominantly due to cell separation rather than cell expansion. Regarding volume changes, substantial cell expansion (Acell increased by ∼1.5 times) during the initial 30 min of cooking was greatly associated with the increase in the cotyledon volume, while the significance of cell separation became more prominent during the later stages of cooking. Furthermore, we found that the seed coat, rather than the cotyledon, played a major role in the swelling of whole beans, which became less pronounced after aging. The macroscopic properties did not correlate with %As/c. However, the evolution of %As/c conveyed information on the swelling of the starch granules during cooking. During the initial phase, the starch granule swelling mainly filled the cells, while during the later phase, the further swelling was confined by the cell wall. This study provides strong microscopic evidence supporting the direct involvement of the cell wall/ middle lamella network in microstructural changes during cooking as affected by aging, which is in line with the results of molecular changes.


Subject(s)
Phaseolus , Vegetables , Cooking , Starch
2.
Prog Urol ; 33(5): 265-271, 2023 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36740508

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To compare the correlation of Gleason score (GS) and ISUP grade determined by prostate biopsies (PBx) and radical prostatectomy (RP) specimens according to the biopsy technique: ultrasound randomised (RBx) vs. MRI/ultrasound fusion targeted (TBx). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between March 2013 and June 2018, we retrospectively included patients who underwent RP for prostate cancer (PCa) histopathologically proven by RBx and/or TBx. All patients had a prebiopsy MRI by a single radiologist (using PI-RADS score), then transrectal RBx (12cores, blinded to MRI lesions) and TBx (2-4 cores/target) with elastic MRI/ultrasound fusion (UroStation™, Koelis, Grenoble, France). Histological findings were compared: PBx vs. RP. RESULTS: One hundred and four patients underwent RP after RBx and/or TBx. ISUP concordance rate was better with the association RBx+TBx 49% (51/104) vs. 43.3% with TBx (P=0.07) and 43.3% with RBx (P=0.13). With RBx, 50% of the patients were downgraded (52/104) against 42.3% (44/104) with TBx (P=0.088). The association RBx+TBx significantly decreased the rate of downgrading of the ISUP score compared to the ISUP score of RP 35.6% (37/104) vs. RBx (50%, P=0.0001) and vs. TBx (42.3%, P=0.016). CONCLUSION: In half of cases, the ISUP score was underestimated in RBx compared to RP specimens. Adding TBx to RBx significantly reduced downgrading. The combination of both biopsy techniques appeared to be the best protocol to get closer to ISUP score and GS of the RP specimens. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: C.


Subject(s)
Prostate , Prostatic Neoplasms , Humans , Male , Image-Guided Biopsy/methods , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Neoplasm Grading , Prostate/diagnostic imaging , Prostate/surgery , Prostate/pathology , Prostatectomy/methods , Prostatic Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Prostatic Neoplasms/surgery , Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology , Retrospective Studies
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