The influence of diet on Lawsonia intracellularis colonization in pigs upon experimental challenge

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Standard

The influence of diet on Lawsonia intracellularis colonization in pigs upon experimental challenge. / Boesen, Henriette T.; Jensen, Tim Kåre; Schmidt, Anja S.; Jensen, Bent B.; Jensen, Søren Munk; Møller, Kristian.

In: Veterinary Microbiology, 2004.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Boesen, HT, Jensen, TK, Schmidt, AS, Jensen, BB, Jensen, SM & Møller, K 2004, 'The influence of diet on Lawsonia intracellularis colonization in pigs upon experimental challenge', Veterinary Microbiology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2004.06.008

APA

Boesen, H. T., Jensen, T. K., Schmidt, A. S., Jensen, B. B., Jensen, S. M., & Møller, K. (2004). The influence of diet on Lawsonia intracellularis colonization in pigs upon experimental challenge. Veterinary Microbiology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2004.06.008

Vancouver

Boesen HT, Jensen TK, Schmidt AS, Jensen BB, Jensen SM, Møller K. The influence of diet on Lawsonia intracellularis colonization in pigs upon experimental challenge. Veterinary Microbiology. 2004. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2004.06.008

Author

Boesen, Henriette T. ; Jensen, Tim Kåre ; Schmidt, Anja S. ; Jensen, Bent B. ; Jensen, Søren Munk ; Møller, Kristian. / The influence of diet on Lawsonia intracellularis colonization in pigs upon experimental challenge. In: Veterinary Microbiology. 2004.

Bibtex

@article{bd6b2ab526e2426688631ef977037ee7,
title = "The influence of diet on Lawsonia intracellularis colonization in pigs upon experimental challenge",
abstract = "The objective of this investigation was to study if different feeding strategies influence experimental infections of pigs with Lawsonia intracellularis, the causative agent of proliferative enteropathy. In three sequential trials, a total of 144 weaned pigs were fed five different diets all made from a standard diet based on wheat and barley as carbohydrate source and soybean as protein source. The five diets were: a standard diet (fine ground and pelleted), the standard diet fed as fermented liquid feed, the standard diet added 1.8% formic acid, the standard diet added 2.4% lactic acid and a diet similar to the standard diet (made from the same ingredients), but fed coarse ground. Twenty-four pigs on each diet were orally inoculated with L. intracellularis and growth performance and faecal excretion of bacteria were monitored. Twenty-four pigs fed the standard diet were included as not experimentally infected controls. Pigs in the first two trials were sacrificed 4 weeks post-inoculation, whereas animals in the third trial were sacrificed after 5 weeks. Pigs in all experimentally infected groups excreted L. intracellularis. The fermented liquid diet delayed the excretion of L. intracellularis and furthermore, pigs fed the standard diet supplemented with lactic acid had limited pathological lesions when the intestines were examined 4 weeks after inoculation. The growth performance was reduced in pigs experimentally challenged with L. intracellularis, however the prevalence and severity of diarrhea was limited.",
author = "Boesen, {Henriette T.} and Jensen, {Tim K{\aa}re} and Schmidt, {Anja S.} and Jensen, {Bent B.} and Jensen, {S{\o}ren Munk} and Kristian M{\o}ller",
year = "2004",
doi = "10.1016/j.vetmic.2004.06.008",
language = "English",
journal = "Veterinary Microbiology",
issn = "0378-1135",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The influence of diet on Lawsonia intracellularis colonization in pigs upon experimental challenge

AU - Boesen, Henriette T.

AU - Jensen, Tim Kåre

AU - Schmidt, Anja S.

AU - Jensen, Bent B.

AU - Jensen, Søren Munk

AU - Møller, Kristian

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - The objective of this investigation was to study if different feeding strategies influence experimental infections of pigs with Lawsonia intracellularis, the causative agent of proliferative enteropathy. In three sequential trials, a total of 144 weaned pigs were fed five different diets all made from a standard diet based on wheat and barley as carbohydrate source and soybean as protein source. The five diets were: a standard diet (fine ground and pelleted), the standard diet fed as fermented liquid feed, the standard diet added 1.8% formic acid, the standard diet added 2.4% lactic acid and a diet similar to the standard diet (made from the same ingredients), but fed coarse ground. Twenty-four pigs on each diet were orally inoculated with L. intracellularis and growth performance and faecal excretion of bacteria were monitored. Twenty-four pigs fed the standard diet were included as not experimentally infected controls. Pigs in the first two trials were sacrificed 4 weeks post-inoculation, whereas animals in the third trial were sacrificed after 5 weeks. Pigs in all experimentally infected groups excreted L. intracellularis. The fermented liquid diet delayed the excretion of L. intracellularis and furthermore, pigs fed the standard diet supplemented with lactic acid had limited pathological lesions when the intestines were examined 4 weeks after inoculation. The growth performance was reduced in pigs experimentally challenged with L. intracellularis, however the prevalence and severity of diarrhea was limited.

AB - The objective of this investigation was to study if different feeding strategies influence experimental infections of pigs with Lawsonia intracellularis, the causative agent of proliferative enteropathy. In three sequential trials, a total of 144 weaned pigs were fed five different diets all made from a standard diet based on wheat and barley as carbohydrate source and soybean as protein source. The five diets were: a standard diet (fine ground and pelleted), the standard diet fed as fermented liquid feed, the standard diet added 1.8% formic acid, the standard diet added 2.4% lactic acid and a diet similar to the standard diet (made from the same ingredients), but fed coarse ground. Twenty-four pigs on each diet were orally inoculated with L. intracellularis and growth performance and faecal excretion of bacteria were monitored. Twenty-four pigs fed the standard diet were included as not experimentally infected controls. Pigs in the first two trials were sacrificed 4 weeks post-inoculation, whereas animals in the third trial were sacrificed after 5 weeks. Pigs in all experimentally infected groups excreted L. intracellularis. The fermented liquid diet delayed the excretion of L. intracellularis and furthermore, pigs fed the standard diet supplemented with lactic acid had limited pathological lesions when the intestines were examined 4 weeks after inoculation. The growth performance was reduced in pigs experimentally challenged with L. intracellularis, however the prevalence and severity of diarrhea was limited.

UR - https://orbit.dtu.dk/en/publications/5d8ce8f4-c671-4188-be27-e60aac780ca6

U2 - 10.1016/j.vetmic.2004.06.008

DO - 10.1016/j.vetmic.2004.06.008

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 15381264

JO - Veterinary Microbiology

JF - Veterinary Microbiology

SN - 0378-1135

ER -

ID: 339889944