Differences in DHA bioaccessibility and fat digestion of DHA-enriched milks: An in vitro infant digestion model


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Date

2025-08

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Journal Article

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Abstract

Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is essential for infant neurodevelopment, and milk is an effective vehicle for delivering DHA to infants. However, it remains unclear how different production and processing methods affect the bioavailability of milk study evaluated the bioaccessibility of DHA in different DHA-enriched milks using a simulated infant digestive model. The results showed that naturally DHA-enriched milk and homogenized naturally DHA-enriched milk exhibited higher DHA bioaccessibility (52.06 % and 43.19 %, respectively) compared to algae oil-enriched milk (33.63 %). Naturally DHA-enriched milk also contained a higher proportion of glycerophospholipid-bound DHA, fewer long-chain fatty acids, and more saturated fatty acids adjacent to DHA within the same triglyceride molecule, which likely facilitated DHA digestion and absorption. Homogenization significantly reduced DHA bioaccessibility, possibly by damaging the milk fat globule membranes and affecting lipolysis. These findings provide a scientific basis and novel insights for developing DHA-enriched milk as a nutritional food for infants and young children.

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published

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213

Pages / Article No.

116602

Publisher

Elsevier

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Subject

DHA-enriched milk; Docosahexaenoic acid bioaccessibility; Lipid digestion; Homogenized milk; In vitro digestion in infants

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