| Literature DB >> 16702277 |
S McMartin1, S Godden, L Metzger, J Feirtag, R Bey, J Stabel, S Goyal, J Fetrow, S Wells, H Chester-Jones.
Abstract
The objective of this study was to identify the critical temperature, at or below which heat-treatment of bovine colostrum would produce no significant changes in viscosity, IgG concentration, or Ig activity. Results of preliminary work, using a Rapid Visco Analyzer (RVA) to heat 50-mL aliquots from 6 unique batches of bovine colostrum at 59, 60, 61, 62, and 63 degrees C, suggested that colostrum could be heated to 60 degrees C for up to 120 min without changing viscosity or IgG concentration. This finding was confirmed by heating 50-mL aliquots from 30 unique batches of colostrum in an RVA for 120 min at 60 and 63 degrees C. Heating colostrum to 63 degrees C resulted in an estimated 34% decrease in IgG concentration and 33% increase in viscosity. However, there was no difference in IgG concentration between preheat-treated (73.4 +/- 26.5 mg/mL) and post-heat-treated (74.5 +/- 24.3 mg/mL) samples after heating colostrum to 60 degrees C in an RVA for 120 min. Similarly, viscosity was unaffected after heating colostrum to 60 degrees C in an RVA for 120 min. High quality colostrum (> or =73.0 mg/mL) suffered greater losses of IgG and greater viscosity changes when heated to 63 degrees C than did moderate quality colostrum (<73.0 mg/mL). However, the effects of colostrum quality were minor if high quality colostrum was only heated to 60 degrees C. The results of a bovine viral diarrhea serum neutralization assay suggested that antibody activity was unchanged after heating colostrum to either 60 or 63 degrees C. However, these results were interpreted as being inconclusive due to a high proportion of missing results because of the congealing of many samples after heat treatment. The results of this study indicate that 50-mL volumes of bovine colostrum can be heat treated at 60 degrees C for up to 120 min in an RVA without affecting IgG concentration or viscosity.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16702277 DOI: 10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(06)72281-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dairy Sci ISSN: 0022-0302 Impact factor: 4.034