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1.
Antibiotics (Basel) ; 8(4)2019 Oct 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31683578

ABSTRACT

Microbial pathogens are the cause of many foodborne diseases after the ingestion of contaminated food. Several preservation methods have been developed to assure microbial food safety, as well as nutritional values and sensory characteristics of food. However, the demand for natural antimicrobial agents is increasing due to consumers' concern on health issues. Moreover, the use of antibiotics is leading to multidrug resistant microorganisms reinforcing the focus of researchers and the food industry on natural antimicrobials. Natural antimicrobial compounds from plants, animals, bacteria, viruses, algae and mushrooms are covered. Finally, new perspectives from researchers in the field and the interest of the food industry in innovations are reviewed. These new approaches should be useful for controlling foodborne bacterial pathogens; furthermore, the shelf-life of food would be extended.

2.
Am J Hum Biol ; 31(3): e23244, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30972859

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Vector bioimpedance analysis (BIVA) can be very useful for the evaluation of body composition, hydration, and nutritional status in infants and newborns. The objective of this study was to determine the impedance vector distribution for a group of healthy newborn Spanish children. METHODS: This was a cross-sectional, descriptive study conducted with 154 healthy, Spanish newborns (gestational age: 37-41 weeks) aged 24 to 72 hours (79 males, 75 females). Weight, height, and cephalic-circumference were determined. Resistance and reactance were measured with a single-frequency impedance analyzer at 50 kHz (tetrapolar analysis). The newborns' specific 95% confidence intervals of the mean vectors and the 95%, 75%, and 50% tolerance intervals for the individual vector measurements were plotted using R and Xc components standardized by the subjects' lengths. The mean impedance vectors were compared with Hotelling's-T2 test for vector analysis (significance level: P < .05). RESULTS: The newborns exhibited gender-related differences in the mean impedance vector (mean [SD] R/H: 833.6 [97.5] Ohm/m in males vs 918.2 [107.7] Ohm/m in females; mean [SD] Xc/H: 91.3 [34.7] Ohm/m in males vs 95.6 [23.2] Ohm/m in females). No statistically significant differences in the mean impedance vectors were observed according to days of life. Lower values of resistance and slightly higher reactance values were observed in the healthy Spanish newborns compared to Italian newborns. CONCLUSIONS: New tolerance ellipses were constructed for healthy Spanish newborns. These data allow detecting alterations in the hydration status and cell mass in term newborns in the first 3 days of life.


Subject(s)
Electric Impedance , Nutrition Assessment , Nutritional Status/physiology , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Reference Values , Spain
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