Water-in-oil organogel based emulsions as a tool for increasing bioaccessibility and cell permeability of poorly water-soluble nutraceuticals
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The use of organogels in food and pharmaceutical sciences has several technical problems related with restricted diffusion of the drugs and lack of a proper gelator molecule. These features are important into the new product design. An alternative to improve technological properties in organogels is the use of emulsions. However, there is a lack of knowledge about the behavior on bioaccessibility and permeability of bioactives loaded into organogel-based emulsions. The objective of the present experimental work was to study the physical properties of organogel-based emulsions made with vegetable oil loaded with three different bioactives (betulin, curcumin and quercetin) and the influence on their bioaccessibility. Organogels were made of canola or coconut oils and myverol as gelator (10%25 w/w). Water-in-oil emulsions (at 5, 10 and 12.5 wt%25 of water content) were prepared by mixing the melted proper organogel and water (80 °C) under high shear conditions (20,000 rpm). Micrographs, rheological tests (amplitude, frequency, temperature sweeps and creep-compliance measurements), DSC and particle size analysis were performed to samples. In vitro digestion (oral, gastric and intestinal phase), lipolysis assays, bioaccessibility and permeability tests by cell culture of Caco-2 were made. Organogels of coconut oil have shown poor emulsification properties. © 2019
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Bioaccessibility; Canola oil; Coconut oil; Emulsion; Organogels; Permeability Cell culture; Emulsification; Emulsions; Mechanical permeability; Particle size; Particle size analysis; Product design; Vegetable oils; Bioaccessibility; Canola oil; Coconut oil; Emulsification properties; Organogels; Pharmaceutical science; Technological properties; Water in oil emulsions; Ostwald ripening; betulin; coconut oil; curcumin; quercetin; triterpene; vegetable oil; water; bioavailability; Caco-2 cell line; chemistry; dietary supplement; differential scanning calorimetry; digestion; emulsion; flow kinetics; human; lipolysis; particle size; permeability; Biological Availability; Caco-2 Cells; Calorimetry, Differential Scanning; Coconut Oil; Curcumin; Dietary Supplements; Digestion; Emulsions; Humans; Lipolysis; Particle Size; Permeability; Plant Oils; Quercetin; Rheology; Triterpenes; Water
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