Polish
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Avian Pathology 2006-Oct

Fatty acids and coccidiosis: effects of dietary supplementation with different oils on coccidiosis in chickens.

Tylko zarejestrowani użytkownicy mogą tłumaczyć artykuły
Zaloguj się Zarejestruj się
Link zostanie zapisany w schowku
Xiaojun Yang
Yuming Guo
Zhong Wang
Wei Nie

Słowa kluczowe

Abstrakcyjny

This study was undertaken to investigate the effects of dietary oils on coccidiosis of chickens infected with Eimeria tenella. Five hundred and four 1-day-old male Arbor Acres chicks were randomly assigned to seven groups. Seven diets were supplemented with poultry oil at 25 and 45 g/kg, corn oil at 25 and 45 g/kg, fish oil at 25 and 45 g/kg, and without oils, respectively, from 1 to 42 days of age. Chickens were inoculated by gavage with 3 x 10(5) sporulated oocysts at 21 days of age. Diets supplemented with oils at 45 g/kg resulted in higher body weight gain than with oils at 25 g/kg or without oils. The packed cell volume in chicks fed with diets supplemented with poultry oil was lower than that in chicks fed with diets supplemented with fish oil, corn oil and without oil. Chickens fed with diets supplemented with poultry oil had higher mortality than that of chickens fed with diets without oil. At 7 days post infection, the chickens consuming fish or corn oil diets had lower levels of plasma carotenoids than those fed with poultry oil supplement or without oils. Fish oil supplementation increased serum interleukin-6 levels in chickens compared with poultry oil at 25 and 45 g/kg and corn oil at 25 g/kg. Fish oil or corn oil enhanced secretory IgA levels in the lumen of the caecum, and oil supplementation tended to decrease serum IgG levels. In conclusion, the diets supplemented with saturated fatty acids aggravated mortality in chickens infected with E. tenella. The deleterious effects on coccidiosis of the diets supplemented with poultry oils might be related to the decreased levels of caecal E. tenella antigen-binding-specific secretory IgA or serum IgG.

Dołącz do naszej strony
na Facebooku

Najbardziej kompletna baza danych ziół leczniczych poparta naukowo

  • Działa w 55 językach
  • Ziołowe leki poparte nauką
  • Rozpoznawanie ziół na podstawie obrazu
  • Interaktywna mapa GPS - oznacz zioła na miejscu (wkrótce)
  • Przeczytaj publikacje naukowe związane z Twoim wyszukiwaniem
  • Szukaj ziół leczniczych po ich działaniu
  • Uporządkuj swoje zainteresowania i bądź na bieżąco z nowościami, badaniami klinicznymi i patentami

Wpisz objaw lub chorobę i przeczytaj o ziołach, które mogą pomóc, wpisz zioło i zobacz choroby i objawy, na które są stosowane.
* Wszystkie informacje oparte są na opublikowanych badaniach naukowych

Google Play badgeApp Store badge