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Mohammad Yaghtini, Moslem Jahani, Javad Feizy, Seyyed Emad Hoseini Taheri, Hossein Estiri,
Volume 9, Issue 2 (May 2024)
Abstract

Lentils are regarded as one of the most significant rainfed legumes in the world. They provide a valuable source of minerals, vitamins, and amino acids. Methods: Proximate composition (moisture, total ash, total fat, protein, fiber, and carbohydrate), mineral content, antioxidant activity (DPPH IC50), as well as total phenolic compounds (TPC) were ascertain in the raw, germinated, and cooked samples of two cultivars of Iranian lentils. Results: Cooking and germination demonstrated a significant effect on TPC, antioxidant activity and minerals. The highest amount of phenolic compounds was detected in raw black lentils, followed by raw green and germinated lentils. The black cultivar exhibited higher proportions of K, Cu, Ca, and Zn and the treatments reduced the concentrations of mineral elements in the investigated samples. Moreover, the losses of the minerals in the cooked samples were higher than in the germinated samples. Conclusions: All three states of black lentils demonstrated higher ash, mineral, total fat, protein, crude fiber, and antioxidant capacity. Cooking and germination induced a significant reduction in the phenolic compounds and antioxidant activity. Considerable reductions were also observed in the minerals content, during cooking and germination

Parisa Keshani, Maryam Yaghtin, Hajar Sotudeh, Fatemeh Mohammadi-Nasrabadi, Hassan Joulaei, Mohammad Ali Mohsenpour,
Volume 9, Issue 4 (Nov 2024)
Abstract

Food security in communities can prevent health complications, so investigators have made efforts to find its related factors through various fields. This study aims to draw a road map for nutrition and food security research in Iran.  Methods: Web of Science, PubMed, Scopus, Embase, and Islamic World Citation Center were searched for eligible publications in nutrition and food security related to Iran for the two decades from 2001 to 2020. Content analysis was done by a co-word network technique using VOSviewer software.  Results: Finally, 28,995 scientific publications among 50,444 search results were eligible to include in this study. The research map was drawn using 403,262 keywords obtained from the title and abstract of the papers. A 23.53% growth rate of publications was seen. Iranian articles were mainly published in scientific journals under 10 subject categories. The highly repeated keywords of "treatment", "plant", "age", "risk", and "consumption" were in publications. Moreover, the articles were categorized into thematic clusters of "environmental and climate change", "health ", "food industry and food safety", and "agriculture and water resources management" which were related to nutrition and food security. An increasing trend was observed in the number of publications during the past two decades in Iran.  Conclusion: The relation of clinical nutrition, malnutrition, diet, and in recent years, food production and climate change with food security have been extensively studied by Iranian researchers. However, they have neglected studies on public health and policy in food and nutrition security, which reveals their dominant clinical or agricultural approach


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