| Literature DB >> 21535566 |
Aishath Naila1, Steve Flint, Graham Fletcher, Phil Bremer, Gerrit Meerdink.
Abstract
Biogenic amines have been reported in a variety of foods, such as fish, meat, cheese, vegetables, and wines. They are described as low molecular weight organic bases with aliphatic, aromatic, and heterocyclic structures. The most common biogenic amines found in foods are histamine, tyramine, cadaverine, 2-phenylethylamine, spermine, spermidine, putrescine, tryptamine, and agmatine. In addition octopamine and dopamine have been found in meat and meat products and fish. The formation of biogenic amines in food by the microbial decarboxylation of amino acids can result in consumers suffering allergic reactions, characterized by difficulty in breathing, itching, rash, vomiting, fever, and hypertension. Traditionally, biogenic amine formation in food has been prevented, primarily by limiting microbial growth through chilling and freezing. However, for many fishing based subsistence populations, such measures are not practical. Therefore, secondary control measures to prevent biogenic amine formation in foods or to reduce their levels once formed need to be considered as alternatives. Such approaches to limit microbial growth may include hydrostatic pressures, irradiation, controlled atmosphere packaging, or the use of food additives. Histamine may potentially be degraded by the use of bacterial amine oxidase or amine-negative bacteria. Only some will be cost-effective and practical for use in subsistence populations.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21535566 PMCID: PMC2995314 DOI: 10.1111/j.1750-3841.2010.01774.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Food Sci ISSN: 0022-1147 Impact factor: 3.167
Biogenic amines reduction through food preservatives.
| Meat | GDL; 0%, 0.5%, 1.0% | 20 to 22 °C | 7 d | Histamine (dropped from 126 to 7 ppm) and putrescine (dropped from 236 to 147 ppm) | ( |
| Indian mackerel (whole) | 10% (weight of fish) Curcumine (turmeric), capsaicin (red pepper), piperine (black pepper) | 5 °C | 8 d | All spices reduced biogenic amines (histamine (dropped from >200 to 13ppm), cadaverine (approximately dropped from 200 to 100 ppm) putrescine (approximately dropped from 100 to 25 ppm), and tyramine (approximately from 200 to <100 ppm) | ( |
| Slightly fermented sausages | Sugar (glucose, lactose) between 4000 and 20000 ppm | 4 °C and 19 °C | 20 d | Cadaverine | ( |
| Tyramine | |||||
| Fermented sausage (Sucuk) | Potassium pyrophosphate (2500 ppm), di-potassium hydrogen phosphate (2500 ppm), ascorbic acid (500 ppm), alpha-tocopherol (200 ppm), potassium sorbate (200 ppm) | Temperature: 20 °C, 30 °C, and 40 °C % relative humidity (RH): 50, 65, and 80 | 60 d | Histamine (dropped from 242 to 35 ppm at 80% RH and at 30 °C), putrescine (dropped from 378 to 12 ppm at 65% RH and at 40 °C), tryptamine (dropped from 60 to 14 ppm at 50% RH and at 20 °C) | ( |
| Myeolchi-Jeot (fermented anchovies) | 5% garlic extract (dissolved in ethanol) | 25 °C | 10 wk | Histamine and tyramine reduced by 20.8% and 31.2%, respectively. Overall amines reduced by 8.7% compared with the control | ( |
| Myeolchi-Jeot (fermented anchovies) | 5% glycine (weight basis), NaCl (20%) | 25 °C | 10 wk | Biogenic amines (putrescine, cadaverine, histamine, tyramine, spermidine) reduced between 63% and 73% compared with the control | ( |
Biogenic amines reduction through high hydrostatic pressure.
| Goat cheese ripening | 400 MPa for 5 min and 50 MPa for 72 h at 14 °C | Ripened at 14 °C and 86% RH | 28 d | Tyramine dropped from 10.3 to 1.6 ppm | ( |
| Meat batter, raw material for sausage fermentation | 200 MPa at 17 °C for 10 min | 12 °C, RH > 95% for 10 d, RH 80% till end of ripening. | 21 d | Putrescine and cadaverine level decreased (88% and 98% reduction compared with the control) | ( |
| Dry-cured sausage (Chorizo) | 350 MPa for 15 min at 20 °C | 2 °C | 160 d | Decrease in tyramine (17%), putrescine (8.7%) and cadaverine (12.5%) | ( |
| Yellowfin tuna and mahi-mahi | 300 to 400 MPa for 5 min | 4.4 °C | 12 d | Reduced histamine producing bacteria ( | ( |
Biogenic amines reduction through irradiation.
| Distilled water containing 100 ppm of biogenic amines | Applied doses: 0, 2.5, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 kGy (best reduced at 25) | – | – | At 20 kGy putrescine, spermidine, phenylethylamine, spermine, and histamine were completely destroyed. | ( |
| Source strength: 100 kCi dose rate: 5 kGy/h at 12 °C | At 25 kGy the remaining amines, cadaverine, tryptamine, tyramine and agmatine were completely destroyed. | ||||
| Pepperoni sausage (fermented) | Applied doses: 0, 5, 10, 20 kGy (best reduced at 20) Source strength: 100 kCi 5 dose rate: kGy/h at 12 °C | Air packaged and stored at 4 °C | 4 wk | Decreased amines at 20 kGy: putrescine (from 2.6 ppm to complete destruction), tyramine (dropped from 0.9 to 0.2 ppm), spermine (dropped from 9.6 to 4.2 ppm) and spermidine (dropped from 11.8 to 8.4 ppm) | ( |
| Low-salt fermented soybean paste (with 6% and 8% salt) | Applied doses: 5, 10, 15 kGy (best reduced at 15) | 25 °C | 12 wk | Putrescine (dropped from 3124 to 797.3 ppm at 8% salt and 15 kGy), | ( |
| Source strength: 100 kCi | |||||
| Dose rate: 5 kGy/h at 13 °C | |||||
| Beef and pork | Applied doses: 0, 0.5, 1, 2 kGy (best reduced at 2)Source strength: 100 kCi dose rate: 83.3 Gy/min at 12 °C | 4 °C | 20 h | Decreased amines at 2 Gy: putrescine (dropped from 4.7 to 2 ppm in beef, and 2.3 to 0.3 ppm in pork), tyramine, (dropped from 24.7 to 9.3 ppm in beef, and 1.3 to 0.8 ppm in pork), and spermine (dropped from 28.4 to 22.4 ppm in beef, and 31.3 to 25.9 ppm in pork) | ( |
| Vacuum packed Chub mackerel ( | Applied dose: 1.5 kGy | At 1 °C with air circulation | 14 d | Significant reduction of histamine (dropped from 50.91 to 2.87 ppm) | ( |
Biogenic amines reduction through packaging.
| Yellowfin tuna ( | MAP (40% CO2/60% O2) | 1 °C | 28 d | No histamine formed/strong inhibitory effect to histamine production and growth of | ( |
| Garfish | MAP (40% CO2 and 60% N2) | 0 and 5 °C | 38 d | Reduced histamine formation in thawed MAP garfish | ( |
| Breast chicken meat | MAP (30% CO2, 70% N2) | 4 °C | 17 d | Slight decrease in cadaverine (223.7 ppm in MAP and 252.7 ppm in air packaging) and putrescine (354 ppm in MAP and 409.6 ppm in air packaging) compared to air packaging | ( |
| Precooked chicken meat | MAP (30% CO2, 70% N2) | 4 °C | 23 d | Reduced putrescine (90.4 ppm under MAP at 23rd d, 202.6 ppm at 23rd d under air) and tyramine (8.8 ppm under MAP at 23rd d, 18.8 ppm at 23rd d under air) | ( |
| Chub mackerel ( | Vacuum packaged | 1 °C | 7 d | Slight reduction (on 7th d of storage), of biogenic amines; histamine (dropped from 57.22 to 47.66 ppm), cadaverine (dropped from 18.93 to 10.07 ppm), spermidine (dropped from 10.29 to 6.94 ppm), putrescine (dropped from 21.13 to 13.52 ppm) | ( |
| Seer fish ( | Packed in pouches (a multilayer film of ethylene-vinyl alcohol) with O2 scavenger sachets | 0 to 2 °C | 30 d | Delayed formation of putrescine (on 15th d in air pack contained 14.62 ppm and on 30th d fish held in O2 scavenger pack contained 11.1 ppm); cadaverine (on 15th d in air pack contained 14.77 ppm and 2.16 ppm in O2 scavenger pack); histamine (air pack reached 6.9 ppm on the 15th d storage while the same level reached on the 30th d in O2 scavenger pack); tyramine (1.7 ppm on 15th day in air pack and 0.07 ppm on 30th d in O2 pack) | ( |