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3.
Poult Sci ; 95(11): 2576-2591, 2016 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27143766

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study was to investigate the efficacy of feed-grade preparations of mannan oligosaccharides ( MOS: ) and oregano essential oil ( OEO: ) in forced molted or fully fed 82-week-old, laying hens. A 2 × 3 factorial experiment investigated the influence of molting vs. full feeding and dietary supplements [i.e., unsupplemented control, MOS (1 g/kg) diet, and OEO (24 mg/kg) diet] on production parameters, egg quality, serum stress indicators, blood constituents, tibial characteristics, liver antioxidant status, and cecal microflora composition. A total of 864 Single Comb White Leghorn hens were randomly assigned to 6 treatments, each with 6 replicates of 24 hens each, and studied for 25 wk. Hens were fed a molt diet containing of 50% alfalfa and 50% wheat bran ( AA+WB: ) for 12 d, then returned to the laying ration. Results indicate that molt vs. full feed impacted more on most variables measured than supplementation or supplement type. Significant (P < 0.01) interactions between molting and diet were observed for the egg production, egg weight, egg mass, and feed conversion ratio ( FCR: ). In fully fed hens, MOS supplementation improved (P < 0.01) the egg production, egg weight, and FCR, and an OEO addition significantly improved the egg production and FCR in forced molted hens. Molting improved egg quality despite the significant regression in ovary and oviduct weight (P < 0.01), though supplements showed no influence. The bone ash (P < 0.01) and mineral content (P < 0.05) of molted hens were significantly lower than those of fully fed counterparts; however, poor mineralization was not reflected in the bones' mechanical properties. No significant differences were observed among treatments for hematological characteristics. Both the MOS and particularly the OEO supplementation improved (P < 0.01) liver antioxidant status and mitigated the significant increase in cecal pathogenic bacteria after molt. Our results indicate that full feeding with an aa+wb diet is an effective non-feed-removal method for molted hens, the benefit of which can be improved with MOS and OEO supplementation.


Subject(s)
Chickens/physiology , Diet/veterinary , Mannans/metabolism , Oils, Volatile/metabolism , Oligosaccharides/metabolism , Origanum/chemistry , Prebiotics , Animal Feed/analysis , Animals , Female , Molting/physiology , Random Allocation
6.
Poult Sci ; 88(11): 2368-74, 2009 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19834088

ABSTRACT

The effects of supplementing a basal diet with 2 levels of an essential oil mixture and an antibiotic on the growth, laying traits, and egg hatching characteristics of broiler breeders were examined in this study. Nine hundred sixty female and 128 male breeders at an age of 1 d old were randomly allocated to 16 replicates (i.e., 4 replicates of 4 dietary treatments) in a floor pen trial. Two levels of an essential oil mixture (EOM; i.e., 24 and 48 mg of EOM/kg of diet) and an antibiotic (i.e., l0 mg of avilamycin/kg of diet) were added to the basal starter, grower, and laying diets from 0 to 45 wk of age. Daily feed allocations were adjusted to produce a target BW and egg production rate of the breeders throughout the experimental period. The BW of the males and females were determined at 12, 21, and 45 wk of age. Livability during the growing and laying period was not affected by the dietary treatments. The fertility and hatchability of total eggs set were positively affected by the supplementation of the EOM in the diet (P < 0.01). The hen-day egg production, hatching egg weight, settable egg ratio, hatching of fertile eggs, extra large egg rate, and proportion of chick weight to egg weight were not affected significantly. The higher level of EOM (48 mg/kg) added to the diet led to the hatching of the heaviest chickens; the lower level of EOM (24 mg/kg) and antibiotic treatments led to the hatching of the intermediate weight chickens, followed by the control treatment (P < 0.01). Hens given the lower level of EOM in their diets produced a higher number of settable eggs and chicks as compared with those of other treatments, whereas hens fed the control diet yielded the lowest total settable eggs and chicks throughout the experimental laying period (P < 0.05). The results of this study showed that supplementing diets with EOM improved fertility, the hatchability of total eggs set, total settable eggs, total chicks, and the chick weight of broiler breeders.


Subject(s)
Chickens/growth & development , Oils, Volatile/pharmacology , Oviposition/drug effects , Plant Oils/pharmacology , Animal Feed/analysis , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Animals , Diet/veterinary , Female , Male
7.
Poult Sci ; 88(9): 2006-13, 2009 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19687288

ABSTRACT

The objective of the present experiment was to study the effects of parental age and heat acclimation of embryos on blood metabolites and hormones of broilers exposed to daily cyclic ambient temperatures from d 21 to 42. Eggs obtained from 32 (younger), 42 (middle-aged), and 65 wk (older) breeders were divided into 2 groups. One group of eggs was incubated at control incubation temperature (ITCONT), whereas the second group was heat-acclimated at 38.5 degrees C for 6 h/d from d 10 to 18 of incubation (ITHA). Chicks were reared at standard brooding temperatures from 1 to 21 d. From d 21 to 42, half of broilers/incubation temperature/parental age was kept as the control (ATCONT), whereas the other half was exposed to daily cyclic heat treatment (ATHIGH) to impose a stress response. There was a reduction in plasma triiodothyronine (T3) levels in ITHA broilers. On d 28, plasma T3 levels were similar regardless of parental age of eggs incubated at ITCONT, whereas ITHA resulted in lower levels of T3 in broilers from 65 wk parents. At the same age, ATHIGH reduced plasma triglycerides with the effect greater for ITHA than ITCONT broilers. Plasma uric acid was also lower for ITHA than ITCONT broilers for the offspring of 65 wk parents on d 28. There was an increase in plasma creatine kinase activity on d 42 in ATHIGH broilers regardless of parental age and incubation temperature. Plasma corticosterone was consistently lower for the ITHA than ITCONT treatment, being significant on d 21 and 42. It was concluded that these changes in blood metabolites and hormones may enhance the thermoregulatory ability of ITHA broilers when exposed posthatch to daily high temperatures.


Subject(s)
Chick Embryo/physiology , Chickens/blood , Chickens/growth & development , Hot Temperature , Acclimatization , Animals , Blood Glucose , Chickens/metabolism , Corticosterone/blood , Creatine Kinase/blood , Lipid Peroxidation , Thyroxine/blood , Triglycerides/blood , Triiodothyronine/blood , Uric Acid/blood
8.
Poult Sci ; 87(12): 2671-7, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19038825

ABSTRACT

The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of parental age and heat acclimation during incubation on BW, cloacal temperature, and blood acid-base balance in fast-growing broilers exposed to daily cyclic high ambient temperatures from 21 to 42 d posthatch. Eggs obtained from 32- (younger), 42- (middle-aged), and 65-wk-old (older) breeders were divided into 2 groups. One group of eggs was incubated at the control incubation temperature (IT(CONT)) and the second group was heat acclimated at 38.5 degrees C for 6 h/d from d 10 to 18 of incubation (IT(HA)). Chicks were reared at standard brooding temperatures from d 1 to 21. From d 21 to 42, half of the broilers per incubation temperature and parental age were kept as controls (AT(CONT)) and the other half were exposed to daily cyclic heat treatment (AT(HIGH)) to impose a stress response. The reduction in BW at AT(HIGH) was more pronounced for progeny from older compared with younger parents. However, this reduction in BW was more or less abolished for broilers from eggs incubated at IT(HIGH), implying an increased tolerance to heat stress. Compared with IT(CONT,) IT(HA) reduced BW of broilers from 32- and 42-wk-old parents while having no effect on those from 65-wk-old parents when reared at AT(CONT). Higher blood pH, and lower partial pressure CO(2) and HCO(3)(-) at AT(HIGH) were associated with greater cloacal temperatures throughout the heat stress from d 21 to 42. Increases in cloacal temperature by AT(HIGH) were greater for IT(CONT) than for IT(HA) broilers. The AT(HIGH) and IT(HA) broilers had lesser blood partial pressure CO(2) concentrations than AT(CONT) and IT(CONT), respectively. Although at AT(HIGH), blood HCO(3)(-) was lower for broilers from all parental ages, it was more pronounced for those from 65-wk-old parents. It is concluded that these changes in blood acid-base balance reflected adaptive responses to heat stress, and incubating eggs at IT(HA) improved thermotolerance of fast-growing broilers.


Subject(s)
Acclimatization/physiology , Body Temperature/physiology , Body Weight/physiology , Chickens/physiology , Hot Temperature , Acid-Base Equilibrium , Aging/physiology , Animals , Bicarbonates/blood , Blood Gas Analysis , Carbon Dioxide/blood , Chickens/blood , Cloaca/physiology , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Oxygen/blood , Partial Pressure
9.
Poult Sci ; 87(6): 1219-28, 2008 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18493014

ABSTRACT

Eggs obtained from broiler breeders at 32 (young), 42 (middle aged), and 65 wk (old) were used to measure the effects of heat acclimation during incubation on morphological, physiological, and metabolic traits at internal pipping (IP) and at hatch. All eggs were from the same stock, and hatching performance was also evaluated. Eggs from each breeder age were incubated at control (CONT) or 38.5 degrees C for 6 h daily from d 10 to 18 of incubation (HA). On d 10 after heat exposure and on d 14, absolute and proportional weights were significantly lower for HA than CONT embryos. By the time of hatching, HA chicks were heavier than CONT chicks, which suggested accelerated growth. This effect was consistent across ages. Liver and heart weights were lower for HA than CONT chicks. At IP, pH was similar for HA and CONT embryos, whereas pO(2) and Na(+) were significantly higher and pCO(2), HCO(3)-, and K(+) significantly lower for HA than CONT embryos. Blood pH was higher in embryos from older than for younger and mid-aged parents at IP. At hatch there was no effect of heat acclimation for blood HCO(3)-, Na(+), and K(+) levels, whereas plasma triglyceride and T(3) levels were higher and plasma uric acid, glucose, and lipid peroxidation levels were lower for HA than CONT chicks. Embryonic mortality was similar among parental ages for CONT. In contrast for HA, embryonic mortality from older parents was higher than for younger and middle-aged parents. A delay in external pipping and hatching time with high incubation temperature was consistent across the breeder ages. It was concluded that lower blood pCO(2), HCO(3)-, K(+), and higher pO(2) at IP stage, plus increased plasma triglyceride concentrations at hatch, indicate adaptive responses of embryos.


Subject(s)
Chick Embryo/physiology , Acclimatization , Aging , Animals , Body Temperature , Chickens/growth & development , Cloaca/physiology , Eggs , Embryonic Development , Female , Ovum/physiology , Temperature
10.
Br Poult Sci ; 48(5): 580-93, 2007 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17952730

ABSTRACT

1. This study compared the effect of dietary supplementation with organic or inorganic selenium (Se) sources plus control amounts or large amounts of vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol acetate) in broilers raised at control (20 to 24 degrees C) or low (14.5 to 16.8 degrees C) temperatures after 2 weeks of age. 2. The following dietary treatments were used from one day old. Diet 1, the control diet, comprised a commercial diet containing 0.15 mg/kg inorganic Se and 50 mg vitamin E/kg feed. Diet 2 was the same as diet 1, supplemented with 0.15 mg/kg inorganic Se. Diet 3 was the same as diet 2 but was supplemented with 200 mg/kg vitamin E. Diet 4 was the same as diet 1, but inorganic Se was replaced with 0.30 mg/kg organic Se. Diet 5 was the same as diet 4, supplemented with 200 mg/kg vitamin E. 3. Low temperature reduced the growth rate of broilers; however, at 6 weeks, there were no differences in the body weights of birds fed on organic Se supplemented diets housed at low or control temperature. The feed conversion ratio was significantly affected by low temperature but not by diet. The heterophil/lymphocyte ratio was higher in chicks after one week in the cold, indicating mild stress. Blood triiodothyronine levels were significantly higher in birds after 1 and 4 weeks in the cold but thyroxin was not affected. 4. Organic Se supplementation increased relative lung weight at the control temperature, which might lead to greater respiratory capacity. Relative spleen weight significantly decreased in broilers fed diets supplemented with inorganic Se under cold conditions, a possible indication of chronic oxidative stress. 5. At the low temperature, supplementation with organic Se alone, or with inorganic Se and vitamin E increased glutathione peroxidase (GSHPx) activity and glutathione (GSH) concentration in the liver of broilers, which may indicate increased activity of birds' antioxidant defence against suboptimal environments.


Subject(s)
Animal Husbandry , Antioxidants/metabolism , Ascites/veterinary , Chickens/growth & development , Selenium/pharmacology , Temperature , alpha-Tocopherol/analogs & derivatives , Aging , Animal Feed , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Animals , Antioxidants/pharmacology , Ascites/prevention & control , Chickens/blood , Diet/veterinary , Dietary Supplements , Heart/drug effects , Lipid Peroxidation , Liver/drug effects , Liver/metabolism , Male , Poultry Diseases/prevention & control , Thyroxine/blood , Tocopherols , Triiodothyronine/blood , Vitamins/pharmacology , Weight Gain/drug effects , alpha-Tocopherol/pharmacology
11.
Poult Sci ; 84(6): 967-76, 2005 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15971540

ABSTRACT

The present experiment was conducted to examine the effects of pre- and postnatal conditioning to induce thermotolerance in broilers hatching from eggs orginating from younger and older breeder flocks. From each flock, 500 eggs were randomly divided into 2 groups and incubated at standard (SIT) and high (HIT) temperatures. At hatch, chicks were allotted to 36 floor pens. At 5 d of age 3 pens per parent age per incubation temperature were heat conditioned (C) for 24 h. At 21 d of age, 3 pens per parent age per incubation temperature were kept under standard (S) rearing temperatures, whereas the remaining broilers (including C) were moved to a heated room (H). Thus, there were 3 groups from 21 to 49 d including S, H, and C+H. The results indicated that to incubate eggs from younger parents at HIT before conditioning at 5 d may reduce deleterious effects of heat stress on body weight at slaughter age. However, HIT temperature decreased slaughter weight of broilers from older parents regardless of rearing temperature. Although conditioning did not prevent increments in rectal temperatures of broilers after 1 wk of heat stress (28 d), adaptation occurred thereafter for broilers from younger parents but not for broilers from older parents. Incubation temperature had no effect on plasma glucose, creatine kinase, uric acid, or triiodotryronine (T3) levels at d 21. There were no differences at 22, 25, or 28 d for T3 concentrations between the H and C+H groups. Overall relative asymmetry was not influenced by treatments on d 49. The results suggest that although pre- and postnatal conditioning may help broilers cope with heat stress, age of parent plays a major role in the ability of broilers to thermoregulate. This is especially the case for broilers originating from younger parents.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological , Body Temperature Regulation/physiology , Body Weight , Chick Embryo/growth & development , Chickens/growth & development , Hot Temperature , Aging , Animals , Body Temperature , Chickens/blood , Heat Stress Disorders , Leukocyte Count , Male , Triiodothyronine/blood
12.
World J Urol ; 22(2): 120-3, 2004 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14689223

ABSTRACT

This study investigated the frequency of allelic imbalance (AI) in particular loci in conventional renal cell carcinoma tissue and premalignant lesions of the kidney. DNA from the tumor tissue, premalignant lesions and normal kidney tissue of radical nephrectomy specimens from 33 patients was obtained. It was amplified with a set of eight microsatellite markers, which are located on chromosomes 2, 3, 5, 8, 9, 11, 16, 17. AI in DNA samples was determined by analysis of the alteration in (CA)n repeats. The rates of AI in tumor tissue were found to be between 22.2% and 53.3% and in premalignant lesions between 11.1% and 40.0%. Premalignant lesions and tumor tissues in conventional renal cell carcinoma have the same genotypic changes in 50.0-87.8% (informative cases). These results suggest that the progressive accumulation of AI in areas of premalignant lesions may contribute to the development of renal cell carcinoma, representing an important molecular event in the multistep renal carcinogenesis cascade.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Renal Cell/genetics , Kidney Neoplasms/genetics , Precancerous Conditions/genetics , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/pathology , Female , Humans , Kidney Neoplasms/pathology , Male , Middle Aged , Precancerous Conditions/pathology
13.
Turk J Haematol ; 18(2): 127-30, 2001 Jun 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27264068

ABSTRACT

CMF (cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and 5-fluorouracil) is one of the most commonly used chemotherapy (CT) regimens in breast cancer. To the best of our knowledge there are no published studies on the toxicity of this regimen in the existence of diabetes mellitus (DM), in the literature. We retrospectively analyzed the myelotoxicity of CMF CT after 40 adjuvant cycles of 18 diabetics, according to WHO toxicity scala. Leucopenia/granulocytopenia was the most prominent toxicity (observed in overall 30% of the cycles), but it was relatively mild (5% grade III and 2.5% grade IV granulocytopenia). Anemia was only grade I (10% of the cycles), and there was no trombocytopenia. Two of the cases with grade III and IV granulocytopenia, had grade I and II urinary tract infections respectively, following the CT. The case with grade IV granulocytopenia and infection had received G-CSF. We conclude that CMF regimen is tolerable in DM as regard to its myelotoxicity. However, the patients should be closely monitored as infections may easily arise in parallel to deepening leucopenia in DM. Further extended studies would be appropriate on the toxicity of CMF as well as the other common CT regimens in DM.

14.
Turk J Haematol ; 18(4): 275-9, 2001 Dec 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27264469

ABSTRACT

Plasma cells are occasionally observed in the peripheral blood of the patients with multiple myeloma. When the number of these circulating cells is significant, the term of plasma cell leukemia is used. We report 5 cases of plasma cell leukemia with poor prognosis with review of the literature.

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