2003
DOI: 10.2527/2003.8171790x
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Response of early-weaned pigs to an enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (K88) challenge when fed diets containing spray-dried porcine plasma or pea protein isolate plus egg yolk antibody, zinc oxide, fumaric acid, or antibiotic1

Abstract: The effect of feeding diets containing either spray-dried porcine plasma (SDPP) or pea protein-isolate (PPI) supplemented with either egg yolk antibodies (EYA) from hens immunized with enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) (K88 and F18) antigens, ZnO, fumaric acid (FA), or carbadox (AB) on pig performance, incidence of scours, and gut morphology was studied in a 14-d experiment. Ninety 10-d-old weaned pigs were assigned to six dietary treatments in a completely randomized design to give five pens per treatme… Show more

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Cited by 164 publications
(116 citation statements)
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“…Specifically, the treatment blend of essential oils and acids improved this ratio compared with the control treatment and the blend of microencapsulated acids. Again, this finding indicates the positive and synergistic effect of acids and essential oils on the intestinal mucosa (OWUSU-ASIEDU et al, 2003;PLATEL;SRINIVASAN, 2004;UTIYAMA et al, 2006). Despite the discrepancies, the overall results indicate that diets containing acids are preferable to the control diet, especially with respect to the villus height and villus/crypt ratio of the jejunum, an important absorptive region and producer of enzymes.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 62%
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“…Specifically, the treatment blend of essential oils and acids improved this ratio compared with the control treatment and the blend of microencapsulated acids. Again, this finding indicates the positive and synergistic effect of acids and essential oils on the intestinal mucosa (OWUSU-ASIEDU et al, 2003;PLATEL;SRINIVASAN, 2004;UTIYAMA et al, 2006). Despite the discrepancies, the overall results indicate that diets containing acids are preferable to the control diet, especially with respect to the villus height and villus/crypt ratio of the jejunum, an important absorptive region and producer of enzymes.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 62%
“…Conversely, Gomes et al (2007) found that the combination of 1% fumaric acid, 01% butyric acid and 05% formic acid in the diet of piglets at three weeks post-weaning reduced the villus height in the duodenum The numbers of Lactobacillus spp and Escherichia coli (Table 10) did not differ between treatments (P> 005), and the lack of Salmonella and Clostridium ssp were also observed. Organic acids and essential oils are known to aid the control of pathogenic microorganisms and favor the development of beneficial bacteria (OWUSU-ASIEDU et al, 2003;PLATEL;SRINIVASAN, 2004;UTIYAMA et al, 2006). However, the positive impacts of the experimental environment and management on the health of animals may have been a confounding factor in the effects of dietary supplementation on bacterial content.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Zinc supplementation has been shown to prevent or alleviate diarrhoea in piglets [30,31,56], to maintain stable levels of the intestinal flora and diverse coliforms that may compete with diarrhoegenic strains for colonisation sites [35] and to reduce translocation of pathogenic bacteria from the small intestine to the mesenteric lymph nodes [30]. However, Li et al [41] did not observe any effect on the microflora collected from the digesta and faeces of piglets after 11 days of high dose ZnO supplementation.…”
Section: Protection Against Pathogensmentioning
confidence: 99%