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الكيمياء الاشعاعية والنووية
Food and Drink App: Sodium in Your Food
المؤلف: University of Missouri System
المصدر: Organic Chemistry ii
الجزء والصفحة: .................
30-10-2020
859
The element sodium, at least in its ionic form as Na+, is a necessary nutrient for humans to live. In fact, the human body is approximately 0.15% sodium, with the average person having one-twentieth to one-tenth of a kilogram in their body at any given time, mostly in fluids outside cells and in other bodily fluids.
Sodium is also present in our diet. The common table salt we use on our foods is an ionic sodium compound. Many processed foods also contain significant amounts of sodium added to them as a variety of ionic compounds. Why are sodium compounds used so much? Usually sodium compounds are inexpensive, but, more importantly, most ionic sodium compounds dissolve easily. This allows processed food manufacturers to add sodium-containing substances to food mixtures and know that the compound will dissolve and distribute evenly throughout the food. Simple ionic compounds such as sodium nitrite (NaNO2) are added to cured meats, such as bacon and deli-style meats, while a compound called sodium benzoate is added to many packaged foods as a preservative. Table 1.1 “Some Sodium Compounds Added to Food” is a partial list of some sodium additives used in food. Some of them you may recognize after reading this chapter. Others you may not recognize, but they are all ionic sodium compounds with some negatively charged ion also present.
Table 1.1 Some Sodium Compounds Added to Food
Sodium Compound | Use in Food |
---|---|
Sodium acetate | preservative, acidity regulator |
Sodium adipate | food acid |
Sodium alginate | thickener, vegetable gum, stabilizer, gelling agent, emulsifier |
Sodium aluminum phosphate | acidity regulator, emulsifier |
Sodium aluminosilicate | anticaking agent |
Sodium ascorbate | antioxidant |
Sodium benzoate | preservative |
Sodium bicarbonate | mineral salt |
Sodium bisulfite | preservative, antioxidant |
Sodium carbonate | mineral salt |
Sodium carboxymethylcellulose | emulsifier |
Sodium citrates | food acid |
Sodium dehydroacetate | preservative |
Sodium erythorbate | antioxidant |
Sodium erythorbin | antioxidant |
Sodium ethyl para-hydroxybenzoate | preservative |
Sodium ferrocyanide | anticaking agent |
Sodium formate | preservative |
Sodium fumarate | food acid |
Sodium gluconate | stabilizer |
Sodium hydrogen acetate | preservative, acidity regulator |
Sodium hydroxide | mineral salt |
Sodium lactate | food acid |
Sodium malate | food acid |
Sodium metabisulfite | preservative, antioxidant, bleaching agent |
Sodium methyl para-hydroxybenzoate | preservative |
Sodium nitrate | preservative, color fixative |
Sodium nitrite | preservative, color fixative |
Sodium orthophenyl phenol | preservative |
Sodium propionate | preservative |
Sodium propyl para-hydroxybenzoate | preservative |
Sodium sorbate | preservative |
Sodium stearoyl lactylate | emulsifier |
Sodium succinates | acidity regulator, flavour enhancer |
Sodium salts of fatty acids | emulsifier, stabilizer, anticaking agent |
Sodium sulfite | mineral salt, preservative, antioxidant |
Sodium sulfite | preservative, antioxidant |
Sodium tartrate | food acid |
Sodium tetraborate | preservative |
The use of so many sodium compounds in prepared and processed foods has alarmed some physicians and nutritionists. They argue that the average person consumes too much sodium from his or her diet. The average person needs only about 500 mg of sodium every day; most people consume more than this—up to 10 times as much. Some studies have implicated increased sodium intake with high blood pressure; newer studies suggest that the link is questionable. However, there has been a push to reduce the amount of sodium most people ingest every day: avoid processed and manufactured foods, read labels on packaged foods (which include an indication of the sodium content), don’t oversalt foods, and use other herbs and spices besides salt in cooking.
Food labels include the amount of sodium per serving. This particular label shows that there are 75 mg of sodium in one serving of this particular food item.