Login / Signup

Probiotics and Postbiotics as an Alternative to Antibiotics: An Emphasis on Pigs.

Md Sekendar AliEon-Bee LeeWalter H HsuKyoungho SukSyed Al Jawad SayemHossain Mohammad Arif UllahSeung-Jin LeeSeung-Chun Park
Published in: Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Probiotics are being used as feed/food supplements as an alternative to antibiotics. It has been demonstrated that probiotics provide several health benefits, including preventing diarrhea, irritable bowel syndrome, and immunomodulation. Alongside probiotic bacteria-fermented foods, the different structural components, such as lipoteichoic acids, teichoic acids, peptidoglycans, and surface-layer proteins, offer several advantages. Probiotics can produce different antimicrobial components, enzymes, peptides, vitamins, and exopolysaccharides. Besides live probiotics, there has been growing interest in consuming inactivated probiotics in farm animals, including pigs. Several reports have shown that live and killed probiotics can boost immunity, modulate intestinal microbiota, improve feed efficiency and growth performance, and decrease the incidence of diarrhea, positioning them as an interesting strategy as a potential feed supplement for pigs. Therefore, effective selection and approach to the use of probiotics might provide essential features of using probiotics as an important functional feed for pigs. This review aimed to systematically investigate the potential effects of lactic acid bacteria in their live and inactivated forms on pigs.
Keyphrases
  • irritable bowel syndrome
  • lactic acid
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • emergency department
  • mental health
  • risk factors
  • clostridium difficile
  • health information