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The impact of heat treatment of bovine milk on gastric emptying and nutrient appearance in peripheral circulation in healthy females: a randomized controlled trial comparing pasteurized and ultra-high temperature milk

Milan, Amber Marie; Barnett, Matthew P.G.; McNabb, Warren C.; Roy, Nicole C.; Coutinho, Schynell; Hoad, Caroline L.; Marciani, Luca; Nivins, Samson; Sharif, Hayfa; Calder, Stefan; Du, Peng; Gharibans, Armen A.; O’Grady, Greg; Fraser, Karl; Bernstein, Daniel; Rosanowski, Sarah M.; Sharma, Pankaja; Shrestha, Aahana; Mithen, Richard F.

The impact of heat treatment of bovine milk on gastric emptying and nutrient appearance in peripheral circulation in healthy females: a randomized controlled trial comparing pasteurized and ultra-high temperature milk Thumbnail


Authors

Amber Marie Milan

Matthew P.G. Barnett

Warren C. McNabb

Nicole C. Roy

Schynell Coutinho

Caroline L. Hoad

Profile image of LUCA MARCIANI

LUCA MARCIANI LUCA.MARCIANI@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Professor of Gastrointestinal Imaging

Samson Nivins

Hayfa Sharif

Stefan Calder

Peng Du

Armen A. Gharibans

Greg O’Grady

Karl Fraser

Daniel Bernstein

Sarah M. Rosanowski

Pankaja Sharma

Aahana Shrestha

Richard F. Mithen



Abstract

Background: Heat treatments of dairy, including pasteurization and ultra-high temperature (UHT) processing, alter milk macromolecular structures, and ultimately affect digestion. In vitro, animal, and human studies show faster nutrient release or circulating appearance after consuming UHT milk (UHT-M) compared with pasteurized milk (PAST-M), with a faster gastric emptying (GE) rate proposed as a possible mechanism. Objectives: To investigate the impact of milk heat treatment on GE as a mechanism of faster nutrient appearance in blood. We hypothesized that GE and circulating nutrient delivery following consumption would be faster for UHT-M than PAST-M. Methods: In this double-blind randomized controlled cross-over trial, healthy female (n = 20; 27.3 ± 1.4 y, mean ± SD) habitual dairy consumers, consumed 500 mL of either homogenized bovine UHT-M or PAST-M (1340 compared with 1320 kJ). Gastric content volume (GCV) emptying half-time (T50) was assessed over 3 h by magnetic resonance imaging subjective digestive symptoms, plasma amino acid, lipid and B vitamin concentrations, and gastric myoelectrical activity were measured over 5 h. Results: Although GCV T50 did not differ (102 ± 7 min compared with 89 ± 8 min, mean ± SEM, UHT-M and PAST-M, respectively; P = 0.051), GCV time to emptying 25% of the volume was 31% longer following UHT-M compared with PAST-M (42 ± 2 compared with 32 ± 4 min, P = 0.004). Although GCV remained larger for a longer duration following UHT-M (treatment × time interaction, P = 0.002), plasma essential amino acid AUC was greater following UHT-M than PAST-M (55,324 ± 3809 compared with 36,598 ± 5673 μmol·min·L-1, P = 0.006). Heat treatment did not impact gastric myoelectrical activity, plasma appetite hormone markers or subjective appetite scores. Conclusions: Contrary to expectations, GE was slower with UHT-M, yet, as anticipated, aminoacidemia was greater. The larger GCV following UHT-M suggests that gastric volume may poorly predict circulating nutrient appearance from complex food matrices. Dairy heat treatment may be an effective tool to modify nutrient release by impacting digestion kinetics. Clinical Trial Registry: www.anzctr.org.au (ACTRN12620000172909).

Citation

Milan, A. M., Barnett, M. P., McNabb, W. C., Roy, N. C., Coutinho, S., Hoad, C. L., …Mithen, R. F. (2024). The impact of heat treatment of bovine milk on gastric emptying and nutrient appearance in peripheral circulation in healthy females: a randomized controlled trial comparing pasteurized and ultra-high temperature milk. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 119(5), 1200-1215. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajcnut.2024.03.002

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 4, 2024
Online Publication Date Mar 6, 2024
Publication Date 2024-05
Deposit Date Mar 6, 2024
Publicly Available Date Mar 14, 2024
Journal American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Print ISSN 0002-9165
Electronic ISSN 1938-3207
Publisher Oxford University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 119
Issue 5
Pages 1200-1215
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajcnut.2024.03.002
Keywords milk, dairy, ultra-high temperature milk, pasteurized milk, food structure, digestion, gastric emptying, MRI, amino acids, body surface, gastric mapping
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/32169261
Publisher URL https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000291652400337X?via%3Dihub