Egg and Egg-Derived Foods: Effects on Human Health and Use as Functional Foods
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Advantages of Egg Consumption for Human Health
Component (Unit) | Amount | Component (Unit) | Amount |
---|---|---|---|
Egg shell (%) | 10.5 | Calcium (mg) | 56.0 |
Egg yolk (%) | 31 | Magnesium (mg) | 12.0 |
Egg white (%) | 58.5 | Iron (mg) | 2.1 |
Water (g) | 74.5 | Phosphorus (μg) | 180.0 |
Energy (Kcal) | 162 | Zinc (mg) | 1.44 |
Protein (g) | 12.1 | Thiamine (mg) | 0.09 |
Carbohydrates (g) | 0.68 | Riboflavin (mg) | 0.3 |
Lipids (g) | 12.1 | Niacin (mg) | 0.1 |
Saturated fatty acids (g) | 3.3 | Folic acid (μg) | 65.0 |
Monounsaturated fatty acids (g) | 4.9 | Cyanocobalamin (μg) | 66.0 |
Polyunsaturated fatty acids (g) | 1.8 | Pyridoxine (mg) | 0.12 |
Cholesterol (mg) | 410 | Retinol equivalents (μg) | 227.0 |
Iodine (μg) | 12.7 | Potassium (mg) | 147 |
Tocopherols (μg) | 1.93 | Carotenoids (μg) | 10 |
Selenium (μg) | 10 | Cholecalciferol (μg) | 1.8 |
3. Undesirable Effects of Egg Consumption
Reference | Study Design | Number and Type of Subjects | Main Conclusion |
---|---|---|---|
Djousse, Graziano, 2008a [30] | Prospective cohort study | 21,275 US male physicians aged 40–85 years | Egg consumption of ≥ 1 per day was related to an increased risk of heart failure among male |
Djousse, Graziano, 2008b [38] | Prospective cohort study | 21,327 US male physicians aged 40–85 years | Infrequent egg consumption does not seem to influence the risk of CVD in male. In addition, egg consumption was positively related to mortality, more strongly so in diabetic subjects |
Herron, Fernandez 2004 [8] | Expert Opinion | - | Current recommendation about limiting egg consumption are not benefiting the public as a whole and may have negative nutritional implications |
Hu et al. 1999 [34] | Prospective study | 37,851 men aged 40 to 75 years at study outset and 80,082 women aged 34 to 59 years at study outset, free of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, or cancer | Consumption of up to 1 egg per day is unlikely to have substantial overall impact on the risk of CHD or stroke among healthy men and women |
Katz et al. 2005 [39] | Randomized crossover controlled trial | 49 patients healthy adults with a mean age of 56 years | Short-term egg consumption does not adversely affect endothelial function in healthy adults |
Li et al. 2013 [12] | Meta-analysis | 320,778 included in 14 different studies | A dose-response association between egg consumption and the risk of CVD and diabetes |
McNamara, 2000a [36] | Review | - | For the general population, dietary cholesterol makes no significant contribution to atherosclerosis and risk of cardiovascular disease |
McNamara, 2000b [40] | Review | - | Cholesterol feeding studies demonstrate that dietary cholesterol increases both LDL and HDL cholesterol with little change in the LDL:HDL ratio |
Nakamura et al. 2006 [28] | Prospective study | 90,735 Japanese men and women aged 40–69 years | Eating eggs up to almost diary was not associated with an increase in CVD-incidence for middle-aged Japanese men and women |
Nakamura et al. 2004 [41] | Prospective study | 5186 Japanese women and 4077 Japanese men aged 40–69 years | Limiting egg consumption may have some health benefits, at least in women in geographic areas where egg consumption makes a relatively large contribution to total dietary cholesterol intake |
Mutungui et al. 2008 [42] | Clinical trial | 31 men aged 40–70 and with a Body Mass Index of 26–37 | Including egg in a carbohydrate-restricted diet results in increasing HDL-C while decreasing the risk factors associated with metabolic syndrome |
Natoli et al. 2007 [10] | Review | - | Egg consumption results in only a small increase in serum cholesterol levels in most people. The inclusion of eggs in the context of a diet low in saturated fat and containing cardio-protective foods is not associated with increased CVD risk. |
Njike et al. 2010 [43] | Randomized placebo-controlled crossover trial | 40 hyperlipidemic adults | Egg consumption was found to be non-detrimental to endothelial function and serum lipids in hyperlipidemic adults, while egg substitute consumption was beneficial |
Quresci et al. 2007 [44] | Prospective study | 9734 men and women aged 25 to 74 years | Consumption of greater than 6 eggs per week does not increase the risk of stroke and ischemic stroke |
Rong et al. 2013 [35] | Meta-analysis | 5847 incident cases for coronary heart disease, and 7579 incident cases for stroke | Consumption of up to one egg per day is not associated with increased risk of coronary heart disease or stroke |
Scrafford et al. 2011 [45] | Prospective study | 33,994 men and women free of CVD and completed food frequency questionnaire | It was not found a significant positive association between egg consumption and increased risk of mortality from CVD or stroke in the US population |
Shin et al. 2013 [46] | Meta-analysis | A total of 16 studies were included, including participants ranging in number from 1600 to 90,735 | Egg consumption is not associated with the risk of CVD and cardiac mortality in general population |
Spence et al. 2012 [31] | Prospective study | 1262 patients attending vascular prevention clinics, mean age of 61.5 years | Regular consumption of egg yolk should be avoided by persons at risk of cardiovascular disease |
Spence et al. 2010 [47] | Review | - | It does exist evidence about people al CVD risk must to restrict egg consumption |
Tran et al. 2014 [33] | Systematic Review | - | Confliting results prevent broad interpretation to conclude the effects of egg consumption and cardiovascular disease among diabetic individuals |
Voutilainen et al. 2013 [48] | Prospective study | 2682 middle-aged men | No evidence was found that people with cardiovascular risk should restrict egg consumption |
Weggemans et al. 2001 [29] | Meta-analysis | 17 studies including 556 subjects, 422 men and 134 women | Dietary cholesterol from eggs raises the ratio of total to HDL cholesterol and, therefore, adversely affects the cholesterol profile |
Zampelas 2012 [49] | Invited Commentary | - | Although it becomes increasingly clearer that, eggs consumption is not associated with CVD risk in healthy populations, the evidence cannot be considered as conclusive in high risk populations |
Zazpe et al. 2011 [50] | Prospective study | 14,145 Mediterranean university graduates | No association between egg consumption and the incidence of CVD was found |
4. Recommendations and Worldwide Consumption of Eggs
5. Potential Markets for Egg-Derived Functional Foods
6. Egg-Derived Products with High Omega-3 Fatty Acid Content
7. Eggs and Egg-Based Products with Low Cholesterol and Saturated Fats Contents
Reference | Method Employed | Results Obtained |
---|---|---|
Aihara et al. 1998 [100] | Degradation of egg yolk cholesterol by Rodococcus equi No. 23 | Degradation of about 60% of egg yolk cholesterol content |
Chiu et al. 2004 [105] | Cholesterol absorption by β-cyclodextrin inmobilized in chitosan beads | Reduction of 92% of cholesterol content in egg yolk |
Christodoulou et al. 1994 [101] | Bioconversion of cholesterol by 3 days of incubation with cholesterol oxidase from Pseudomonas fluorescens and Nocardia erythropolis | 93% of egg yolk cholesterol bioconversion |
Froning et al. 2008 [98] | Extraction of cholesterol from dried egg yolk using supercritical carbon dioxide | Reduction of about 2/3 of total cholesterol content in egg yolk |
Garcia-Rojas et al. 2007 [106] | Extraction of cholesterol in liquid egg yolk using high methoxyl pectins | The egg yolk contends of cholesterol decreased about 14% |
Garcia-Rojas et al. 2006 [107] | Removing egg yolk plasma cholesterol using Streamline Phenyl® resin | 70% of egg cholesterol content decreased in yolk plasma |
Hsieh et al. 1994 [108] | Removing cholesterol and fat from egg by an anionic chelating agent (gum arabic) | Obtaining egg yolk essentially free from cholesterol |
Jackeschky 2001 [109] | Dehydrating whole eggs or egg yolks and there upon treating it with an extraction based on a low-cholesterol, liquid food oil | Cholesterol proportion in the egg yolk being lowered by at least 95% |
Kijowski, Lombardo 2000 [110] | Removing cholesterol from egg yolk by shearing a mixture of oil:egg yolk:water ratio | Reduction in cholesterol content about 50%–82% in egg yolk |
Laca et al. 2014 [111] | Different methods to obtain egg yolk granules | Reduction in cholesterol content about 80%–90% in egg yolk granules with respect to egg yolk |
Lv et al. 2002 [102] | Bioconversion of yolk powder cholesterol by extracellular cholesterol oxidase obtained from a mutant Brevibacterium sp | More than 85% of the yolk powder cholesterol was bioconverted |
Manohar et al. 1998 [104] | Extraction of cholesterol from egg materials based on the use of β-cyclodextrin | Reduction of about 94.5% of total egg yolk cholesterol and esters |
Martucci et al. 1997 [97] | Extraction of cholesterol from dehydrated hen egg yolk using acetone as solvent | Reduction about 91% of cholesterol content in egg |
Sotelo, González 2000 [96] | Elaboration o fan egg powder mixture with a 3:1 proportion of white and yolk | Reduction about 40% of cholesterol content in egg |
Sun et al. 2011 [99] | Ultrasonic-assisted enzymatic degradation | Cholesterol level in egg yolk was reduced to 8.32% of its original concentration without affecting the quality attributes of the yolk |
Valcarce et al. 2002 [103] | Biocenversion of egg cholesterol to into pro-vitamin D sterols by the non-pathogenic ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila | Cholesterol content in egg yolk was reduced in about 55% |
8. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Miranda, J.M.; Anton, X.; Redondo-Valbuena, C.; Roca-Saavedra, P.; Rodriguez, J.A.; Lamas, A.; Franco, C.M.; Cepeda, A. Egg and Egg-Derived Foods: Effects on Human Health and Use as Functional Foods. Nutrients 2015, 7, 706-729. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu7010706
Miranda JM, Anton X, Redondo-Valbuena C, Roca-Saavedra P, Rodriguez JA, Lamas A, Franco CM, Cepeda A. Egg and Egg-Derived Foods: Effects on Human Health and Use as Functional Foods. Nutrients. 2015; 7(1):706-729. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu7010706
Chicago/Turabian StyleMiranda, Jose M., Xaquin Anton, Celia Redondo-Valbuena, Paula Roca-Saavedra, Jose A. Rodriguez, Alexandre Lamas, Carlos M. Franco, and Alberto Cepeda. 2015. "Egg and Egg-Derived Foods: Effects on Human Health and Use as Functional Foods" Nutrients 7, no. 1: 706-729. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu7010706