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The Impact of Enhancing Diet Quality or Dietary Supplementation of Flavor and Multi-Enzymes on Primiparous Lactating Sows.

Li ZheRui ZhouPeter Kappel TheilUffe KroghLunxiang YangYong ZhuoYan LinShengyu XuXuemei JiangLingjie HuangLianqiang CheLianqiang CheDe WuZhengfeng Fang
Published in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2022)
This study was aimed to explore how a high-quality diet or a flavor plus multi-enzyme diet affects the feed intake, nutrient digestibility and antioxidation capacity of lactating sows and the growth of their progeny. Thirty primiparous sows were randomly assigned to three treatments from d 2 of lactation until weaning (d 21): control (CON), with a basal diet; high quality (HQ), with 200 kcal/kg higher net energy than CON; or the CON diet supplemented with 500 mg/kg flavor and 100 mg/kg multi-enzymes (F + E). Sows fed with the HQ or F + E diets improved piglets' live weight ( p < 0.05) and average daily weight gain ( p < 0.10), litter weight gain ( p < 0.10) and piglet growth to milk yield ratio ( p < 0.10). Compared with CON, the HQ and F + E groups increased the digestibility of ether extract, ash, neutral detergent fiber, crude fiber and phosphorus ( p < 0.10), and the HQ group also increased dry matter, gross energy, crude protein, acid detergent fiber and energy intake ( p < 0.05). Compared with CON, the F + E group decreased serum urea nitrogen and aspartate aminotransferase ( p < 0.05) and enhanced superoxide dismutase, catalase and glutathione peroxidase, but it decreased malondialdehyde in milk supernatant ( p < 0.05).
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