Publications by authors named "Samuel A O Adeyeye"

Article Synopsis
  • - This study examined how the fermentation time of white lima beans affects their nutritional quality, revealing that longer fermentation increases protein and mineral content while decreasing fiber and fat levels.
  • - Optimal nutrient increases were found at 24 hours of fermentation, showing significant boosts in β-carotene, and vitamins B2 and B3, while antinutritional factors like phytate and tannins decreased.
  • - The research highlights that fermentation improves digestibility and functional properties of lima beans, making them more appealing for nutrition enhancement and food product development, particularly in rural communities.
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This review examines the nexus of poverty, malnutrition and diseases in Africa, the challenges, implications and their mitigation. The paper takes a critical look at available literatures on the primary causes, modes, implications and solutions to the problems of poverty, malnutrition and diseases in Africa continent. Poverty and malnutrition are outcomes of uncontrolled rapid population growth, inefficient agricultural and industrial practices, high debt profile of many African countries due to poor governance and corruption, diseases such as AIDS epidemic, malaria, Ebola virus and COVID-19 pandemic, poor and inadequate health infrastructure and armed conflicts.

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Maize was cofermented with pigeon pea for production and evaluated for microbiological qualities. White maize and pigeon pea were mixed at ratios of 90:10, 80:20, 70:30, 60:40, and 50:50, respectively, with 100:0 serving as the control. Mixtures were cofermented for 96 h at 27 ± 2°C, and microbiological and sensory qualities analyzed were carried out using analysis of variance.

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Maize was cofermented with pigeon pea for ogi production and evaluated for nutritional (proximate composition, minerals, vitamins, and amino acid profile analyses) and antinutritional (phytate, tannin, and trypsin inhibitor activity analyses) qualities. White maize and pigeon pea were mixed at ratios of 90:10, 80:20, 70:30, 60:40, and 50:50, respectively, with 100:0 serving as the control. Mixtures were cofermented for 96 hr at 27°C ± 2°C and nutritional, mineral, and antinutritional qualities were analyzed using analysis of variance.

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