1990
DOI: 10.1079/bjn19900069
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A comparison of the availability and ileal digestibility of lysine in cottonseed and soya-bean meals for grower/finisher pigs

Abstract: The availability of lysine and the ileal digestibility of amino acids in three cottonseed meals and a soyabean meal for growerlfinisher pigs were determined. The usefulness of the availability estimates for formulating diets was assessed. The availability of lysine, as assessed with a slope-ratio assay, was (proportion of total): cottonseed meal no. 1, 0.27; no. 2, 0.30; no. 3, 0.29; soya-bean meal, 0.90. Ileal digestibility of lysine in the meals (proportion of total) was: cottonseed meal no. 1,0.58; no. 2,06… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(55 citation statements)
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“…The values for lysine availability from a cottonseed (0.30) and a soya-bean (0.90) meal were used to formulate diets of equal available lysine content (Batterham et al 1990b). In addition, the values for lysine availability were used to correct the estimated availability of other essential amino acids.…”
Section: A L I D I T Y O F a S S A Y Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The values for lysine availability from a cottonseed (0.30) and a soya-bean (0.90) meal were used to formulate diets of equal available lysine content (Batterham et al 1990b). In addition, the values for lysine availability were used to correct the estimated availability of other essential amino acids.…”
Section: A L I D I T Y O F a S S A Y Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a comparative study of ileal digestibility and availability of lysine, Batterham et al (1990b) reported that the values were similar for soyabean meal, but for three cottonseed meals ileal digestibility values were considerably higher than availabilities (Table 3). Subsequent testing of the values for lysine availability confirmed their applicability in dietary formulations (see Table 2).…”
Section: Relationship Between Ileal Digestibility a N D Availabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For severely processed protein sources, the slope-ratio assay gives superior information to the traditional ileal digestibility assay and considerable work has been conducted to compare these two assays. Batterham et al 48 showed that ileal digestible lysine determined using traditional amino acid analysis overestimated the available lysine content of cottonseed meal but not high-quality soyabean meal when fed to growing pigs. Furthermore, ileal digestible lysine also overestimated bioavailable lysine determined using the slope-ratio assay for heated field peas when fed to pigs 49 .…”
Section: Figmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the failing of these assays is that they do not take into account the possibility that the digestion and absorption of unmodified lysine in a food protein may be less than 100 %. This is an important consideration since the amino acid (including reactive lysine) digestibility of processed foods or feedstuffs is often far from complete 29,32,48,64,89 . Moughan et al 46 using a heated glucose -casein mixture clearly demonstrated that considerable amounts of dietary reactive lysine were not absorbed from the small intestine of the growing pig ( Table 1).…”
Section: Determining Available Lysinementioning
confidence: 99%
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