Essential Elements, Cadmium, and Lead in Raw and Pasteurized Cow and Goat Milk
ANTHONY LOPEZ, W.F. Collins, H. L. WILLIAMS
Journal of Dairy Science
Abstract
Fifteen essential elements plus cadmium and lead were determined in raw and pasteurized cow and goat milks by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. When results were compared on a wet weight basis, there were no significant differences between the raw and pasteurized milks except for cobalt, iron, and lead in goat milk. When copper in goat milk was expressed on a dry weight basis, there was a significant difference between raw and pasteurized milk. There were significantly higher amounts of cobalt, copper, iron, lead, magnesium, and phosphorus, wet weight basis, in pasteurized goat milk than in pasteurized cow milk. Significantly more nickel and sodium were in pasteurized cow milk. No difference in the content of chloride, calcium, potassium, and zinc was significant between the two milks. When dry weights of the two milks were compared, statistical differences were the same, except there was significantly more calcium and potassium in pasteurized cow milk than in pasteurized goat milk and there were no significant differences in the content of lead and phosphorus between the two milks.
Extracted Claims
7 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
lead and phosphorus showed no significant difference between the two milks (dry weight basis)
“When dry weights of the two milks were compared, statistical differences were the same, except there was significantly more calcium and potassium in pasteurized cow milk than in pasteurized goat milk ...”
cobalt, copper, iron, lead, magnesium, and phosphorus were significantly higher in pasteurized goat milk than in pasteurized cow milk (wet weight basis)
“There were significantly higher amounts of cobalt, copper, iron, lead, magnesium, and phosphorus, wet weight basis, in pasteurized goat milk than in pasteurized cow milk.”
nickel and sodium were significantly higher in pasteurized cow milk
“Significantly more nickel and sodium were in pasteurized cow milk.”