Article citationsMore>>
Mineo, H., Nakazawa, T., Morikawa, N., Ishida, K., Ohmi, S., Machida, A., Noda, T., Fukushima, M. and Chiji, H. (2008) Feeding of Potato Starch Increases Maltose and Sucrose Activity Only in Duodenal Segment of the Small Intestine in Rats. Journal of Applied Glycoscience, 55, 203-209.
https://doi.org/10.5458/jag.55.203
has been cited by the following article:
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TITLE:
A Comparison of Microwave-Assisted Heating with Conventional Heating of Sweet Potato (Ipomoea batatas): Analysis of Monosaccharides and Disaccharides
AUTHORS:
Toratane Munegumi, Akito Goto, Yoshihide Nakamura
KEYWORDS:
Microwave-Assisted Heating, Sweat Potato, Saccharides, HPLC, Amino Column
JOURNAL NAME:
Food and Nutrition Sciences,
Vol.10 No.3,
March
26,
2019
ABSTRACT: Microwave-assisted heating has been recently used for extracting nutrient components from food materials. The technique sometimes invokes reactions from nutrient compounds during microwave-irradiation because it activates water molecules to reach a high temperature. The microwave-irradiation produced 5.3 g maltose per 100 g sweat potatoes in 30 s, which was faster than conventional heating (3.9 g maltose per 100 g in 300 s). Fructose level increased with the longer reaction time under microwave-irradiation (from 1.33 g to 1.65 g in 120s), but decreased with a longer reaction time under conventional heating (from 0.99 g to 0.83 g in 1200 s). This study demonstrates the differences in the reactions and products between microwave-irradiation and conventional heating.