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The effects of carcass conditioning on shear force values and water holding capacity of different skeletal muscles of malaysian indigenous (MALIN) sheep and the changes in their pH and glycogen contents

Version 2 2024-06-18, 06:19
Version 1 2018-05-30, 15:14
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-18, 06:19 authored by SA Qurni, HM Abdullah, AT Olusesan, AJ Malar
This study investigated the effects of carcass conditioning on shear force values and water holding capacity of various major skeletal muscles (Infraspinatus, Supraspinatus, Triceps brachii, Longissimus dorsi, Rectus femoris, Vastus lateralis, Semitendinosus, Semimembranosus and Adductor femoris) obtained from a total of 18, 1 year old Malaysian Indigenous rams. It also studied the effect of conditioning on changes in their pH and glycogen contents. Sequel to the conditioning, muscle samples were analysed for shear force values and water holding capacity. The postmortem conditioning resulted in significant decline (p > 0.05) in muscle pH, glycogen, shear force values and drip loss while the cooking loss remained unaffected. Statistically, there was no interaction (p > 0.05) between the conditioning period and muscle type and this indicates that the effects of conditioning on muscle pH, shear force values, drip loss and cooking loss were independent of the muscle type. Meanwhile, its effect on glycogen was influenced by the muscle type. © Medwell Journals, 2011.

History

Journal

Journal of Animal and Veterinary Advances

Volume

10

Pagination

3100-3106

Location

Al Rega, Pakistan

ISSN

1680-5593

eISSN

1993-601X

Language

eng

Notes

DOI not found - error message

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Medwell Journals

Issue

23

Publisher

Medwell Journals

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