Genre
- Journal Article
To induce gastric ulcers, finely ground (578±1.89 µm), maize-wheat-based diets containing melatonin 0, 2.5, 5 and 10 mg/kg, were offered to 64 Yorkshire barrows and gilts (mean weight 22.2±2.0 kg) assigned to 16 pens (4 per pen), until they reached 105 kg. At postmortem, ulcers were scored from 0 (no ulcer) to 3 (severe ulcer). Volume, percent moisture, pH and bile acid concentration of stomach digesta were determined. Melatonin supplementation was associated with a decreasing severity of ulcers (P<0.05). There were no differences in average daily gain between melatonin treatments, although 10 mg/kg diet caused a reduction in feed intake. Bile acid levels in stomach digesta were highest in pigs fed on the melatonin-free (control) diet (P<0.05); pigs with severe ulcers had higher bile acid levels than those with no ulcers (P<0.05). The results showed that pigs supplemented with melatonin had significantly fewer ulcers and less severe ulcers than those not supplemented with melatonin.
Ayles, H. L.: Department of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario ON N1G 2W1, Canada.
Source type: Electronic(1)
http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=lah&AN=19971405862&loginpage=Login.asp&site=ehost-live
Language
- English
Subjects
- treatment
- liveweight gains
- Swine
- hogs
- Animal Nutrition (Physiology) (LL510)
- animals
- Suiformes
- Sus
- pigs
- eukaryotes
- stomach ulcer
- gastric ulcer
- gastrointestinal diseases
- Feed Additives (RR130)
- ulcers
- bile acids
- Sus scrofa
- Chordata
- Non-Communicable Diseases and Injuries of Animals (LL860)
- Suidae
- Artiodactyla
- Animal Treatment and Diagnosis (Non Drug) (LL880) (Discontinued March 2000)
- Animal Nutrition (Production Responses) (LL520)
- liveweight gain
- intake
- Stomach diseases
- melatonin
- stomach ulcers
- ungulates
- pig feeding
- gastric ulcers
- mammals
- vertebrates
- feed intake