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Antioxidants versus Food Antioxidant Additives and Food Preservatives

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox8110542

Keywords

human safety; food rotting; food decay; food contamination; REDOX reaction; taste; sulfites

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Natural and processed foods are fragile and can become unpalatable and/or rotten. The processed food industry uses preservatives to enable distribution, even to different continents, and to extend the useful life of their products. Preservatives impede oxidation, a mandatory step in rotting, either by aerobic or anaerobic mechanisms. From a functional point of view, these compounds are antioxidants, and, therefore, a kind of contradiction exists when a preservative is considered bad for human health while also thinking that antioxidants provide benefits. The basis of antioxidant action, the doses required for preservation, and the overall antioxidant action are revisited in this work. Finally, the bad and the good of food additives/preservatives are presented, taking into account the main mediator of antioxidant beneficial actions, namely the innate mechanisms of detoxification. Foods that strengthen such innate mechanisms are also presented.

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