36
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: not found

      Acute exercise stress and electrical stimulation influence the consumer perception of sheep meat eating quality and objective quality traits

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisher
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          The effects of acute exercise stress and electrical stimulation on lamb eating quality and objective measurements of quality were evaluated on the Longissimus thoracis et lumborum (LTL) and the Gluteus medius (GM) muscles. Meat quality attributes were also assessed on the LTL, Semimembranosus (SM) and the Semispinalis capitis (SC) muscles. Forty-eight Poll Dorset × Border Leicester–Merino ewes of about 6 months old were randomly allocated to treatments in a 2 × 2 factorial design, with the respective factors being exercise (Ex, 0 v. 15 min) and post-slaughter low voltage electrical stimulation (control v. ES). In general, exercise reduced the rate of pH fall and increased the ultimate pH of all 3 muscles (P<0.05). This effect was more pronounced in the SM than in the LTL and SC. Exercised LTL and SM muscles also had lower surface lightness (L*) values and higher muscle total water content, indicating an increased incidence of dark cutting meat. Exercised LTL steaks were rated higher for tenderness and juiciness by the taste panelists and had lower Warner-Bratzler shear force values, as is often observed with high ultimate pH meat. Electrical stimulation reduced initial pH (pH0.5) values, but resulted in a slower rate of pH fall in the LTL and SM thereafter. Electrical stimulation resulted in an elevation of temperature at rigor in the SM by 10°C (15 v. 25°C) and in the LTL by 3.1°C (7.4 v. 10.5°C). While no effect of electrical stimulation was observed with instrumental analysis, electrical stimulation reduced sensory tenderness scores and overall liking for the GM, and tended to reduce flavour and juiciness of both the GM and LTL. In conclusion, acute exercise pre-slaughter improved eating quality, but caused dark cutting meat. The negative effect of low voltage stimulation on the eating quality of the GM was probably due to a high rigor temperature and associated heat toughening.

          Related collections

          Most cited references23

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          Sarcomere shortening of prerigor muscles and its influence on drip loss.

          Detailed studies of muscle shortening post mortem at incubation temperatures between -2°C and +38°C revealed that the sarcomeres in unrestrained, excised red bovine muscle (M. sternomandibularis) shortened less than 10 % in the prerigor state between 6°C and 18°C. Below 6°C, sarcomeres contracted up to 70%. Between 20°C and 38°C sarcomere shortening of 40% was observed. In the red porcine M. cleidooccipitalis the minimum of shortening was measured at about 10°C, a higher degree of shortening-up to 50%-being obtained above and below this temperature. The drip loss of both muscle types increased linearly with increasing prerigor shortening. This latter relationship is discussed with regard to changes within the muscle post mortem. The influence of three events on water movement from the interfilamental space into the interfibrillar fluid and from there into the extracellular space is critically evaluated. These events are: (1) the prerigor contraction of sarcomeres depending on the temperature of storage, (2) the changes due to the falling pH post mortem and (3) the onset of rigor mortis, with its irreversible association of actin and myosin. Copyright © 1986. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            An assessment of the role of pH differences in determining the relative tenderness of meat from bulls and steers.

            Samples of M. longissimus dorsi from 16-20 month Friesian bulls or steers (80/group) were assessed for a range of meat quality characteristics after being held at ambient temperature for 24h (to avoid cold-shortening) and then at 0-2°C for 6 days. Mean ultimate pH was significantly higher for samples from the bulls (6·35 versus 5·89), and as a consequence, reflectance values were lower, sarcomere lengths were shorter, and expressed juice and cooking losses were lower. Mean Warner-Bratzler shear values did not differ between the groups, apparently because the bull values were mainly above the peak of the pH/shear force curve, while the steer values were mainly below it. There was no evidence that the relationship between shear force and pH differed for samples from the bulls and steers. Results suggested that the increased shear force with increased pH up to 6·2 was at least partly due to a decreased sarcomere length. It is suggested that some of the differences in tenderness between beef from bulls and steers, that have been reported elsewhere, may have been largely due to differences in ultimate pH values.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: not found

              The effects of the ultimate pH of meat on tenderness changes during ageing.

              A range of ultimate pH (pH(u)) values, from 5.4 to 7.2, was produced in the m. longissimus thoracicum et lumborum (LD) of 55 sheep by subcutaneous injections of adrenaline, or by injection and subsequent exercise. The rate constant of ageing for each of 47 animals was calculated from shear force measurements, taken at intervals for up to 5 days from the LD held at 12 dgC. The relationship between the ageing rate and pH(u) could be adequately described by the equation rate constant (k) = 4.109 - 1.349(pH) + 0.1111(pH)(2); r(2) = 0.707, with a minimum rate constant at pH 6.07. The loin muscles from eight carcasses were selected to determine the effects of ultimate pH on the initial, unaged toughness value. Calpain activity was inhibited by intramuscular injection of ZnCl(2) dissolved in saline, and the muscles were aged at 10-12 °C on the carcass for up to 6 days. At all values of pH(u) (5.4-6.7), tenderness as measured by shear force were equivalent, from which it was concluded that the initial toughness of unaged lamb was not affected by pH(u). In the contralateral, untreated muscle, ageing was measured using both shear force measurement and changes in the myofibrillar fragmentation index (MFI). After 1 day, the intermediate pH range (5.8-6.2) has the highest shear force and the lowest fragmentation index value. However, in contrast to the shear force values, the ultimate MFI value in aged muscle was lowest in the high pH(u) range (6.4-6.7; minimum value at 6.4). The highest fragmentation values were found at the low pH(u) range. These observations suggest that pH(u)-related tenderness differences in meat result from different rates of ageing in the post rigor period, and therefore that these differences disappear following a sufficient ageing period. The slowest rate of tenderization measured on cooked meat was observed at pH(u) values around 6.07, but the least fragmentation of raw meat was observed at pH(u) values around 6.4, a difference of almost 0.33 pH unit.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture
                Aust. J. Exp. Agric.
                CSIRO Publishing
                0816-1089
                2005
                2005
                : 45
                : 5
                : 553
                Article
                10.1071/EA03270
                ff90d418-860b-4077-bfe2-29b70ed127b2
                © 2005
                History

                Comments

                Comment on this article