1993
DOI: 10.3382/ps.0720483
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Vitamin Profiles of Eggs as Indicators of Nutritional Status in the Laying Hen: Riboflavin Study

Abstract: Two experiments determined the effect of dietary riboflavin supplementation on egg yolk and albumen riboflavin concentrations, egg production, egg weight, shell thickness, hen weight, hatchability, incidence of clubbed down, and incidence of hemorrhagic embryos. In the first experiment, hens were fed rations containing 1.55, 2.20, 4.40, and 8.80 mg of riboflavin/kg of diet for 27 wk. Significant (P < .05) depressions in both yolk and albumen riboflavin concentrations were noted at the two lower riboflavin leve… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…The regression equation was y = 0.1172x + 528.175, where y is egg retinol (i.u/100g), and x is dietary retinyl palmitate (i.u/kg), indicating that egg retinol increased linearly as dietary vitamin A rose. These data are in agreement with previous reports indicating the influence of dietary vitamin A on its concentration in the egg yolk (Squires and Naber, 1993;Qui and Sim, 1998). The addition of increasing levels of dietary folic acid showed a trend to reduce the yolk retinol content, decreasing in 47.69, and 34.03%, respectively for 0.5, and 1.0 mg of supplemental folic acid/kg of diet, in comparison with the control group (Table 4).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 93%
“…The regression equation was y = 0.1172x + 528.175, where y is egg retinol (i.u/100g), and x is dietary retinyl palmitate (i.u/kg), indicating that egg retinol increased linearly as dietary vitamin A rose. These data are in agreement with previous reports indicating the influence of dietary vitamin A on its concentration in the egg yolk (Squires and Naber, 1993;Qui and Sim, 1998). The addition of increasing levels of dietary folic acid showed a trend to reduce the yolk retinol content, decreasing in 47.69, and 34.03%, respectively for 0.5, and 1.0 mg of supplemental folic acid/kg of diet, in comparison with the control group (Table 4).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Two hundred H and N female chickens 3 were assigned randomly to four groups of 50 pullets each at 40 wk of age under the same conditions of management and housing described for Experiment 2 by Squires and Naber (1993). The basal diet employed was the corn and soybean meal diet used in Experiment 2 above except that the vitamin premix [see Table 1, Footnote 2 of Squires and Naber (1993)] containing vitamin A, cholecalciferol, vitamin E, vitamin K, pantothenic acid, niacin, and vitamin B 12 was omitted and no riboflavin was added to the basal diet.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Egg riboflavin content decreases very rapidly after laying hens are fed diets without a riboflavin supplement (Squires and Naber, 1993). Such changes are detectable within 4 to 7 days, and egg riboflavin concentrations return to normal values within the same time period when riboflavin is returned to the deficient diet.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 90%
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“…Vomiting, resorption disorders and diarrhoea, due to inflammation of the mucous membranes of the digestive tract, have been described and in hens, egg laying is disturbed. Squires and Naber (1993b) investigated the relationship between dietary riboflavin supplementation of laying hens (1.55-8.8 mg/kg) and egg production as well as riboflavin content in eggs. Egg production, egg weight, hatchability and hen weight Vitamins and laying performance: G.M.…”
Section: Vitamin B 2 (Riboflavin)mentioning
confidence: 99%