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Poultry Science, Vol 77, Issue 8, 1217-1227
Copyright © 1998 by Poultry Science Association


Articles

Effect of dietary energy level and oil source on broiler performance and response to an inflammatory challenge

DR Korver, E Roura, and KC Klasing

Department of Avian Sciences, University of California, Davis 95616, USA.

Broiler chicks were fed one of five diets from 3 d of age: a low energy diet containing 7% cellulose (ME 2,714 kcal/kg), or high energy diets containing approximately 7% of either tallow, corn oil, safflower oil, or fish oil (each 3,302 kcal/kg). Half of the chicks were injected intra-abdominally with Salmonella typhimurium lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on Day 11, sephadex on Day 13, and Freund's complete adjuvant on Day 15; samples were collected on Day 16. The uninjected chicks served as controls. In a second experiment, 3-d-old chicks were fed one of eight isocaloric diets containing tallow as the sole supplemental fat source, or tallow plus either 2% corn oil, 1, 1.5, or 2% fish oil, or fish meal at an amount to provide 1, 1.5 or 2% supplemental oil. Half of the chicks were injected intra-abdominally with S. typhimurium LPS on Days 10, 12 and 14; the uninjected chicks served as controls. Samples were taken on Day 15. In Experiment 1, the cellulose diet decreased performance to 10 d of age relative to the other diets, whereas immunogen injection decreased weight gain and feed efficiency and increased indices of inflammation among all dietary groups. Fish oil at approximately 7% of the diet did not improve weight gain. Fish oil diets improved weight gain and feed efficiency in Experiment 2 relative to the other diets, in spite of minimal effects on indices of inflammation. Injection of LPS decreased performance and increased inflammation across dietary treatment, although the second LPS injection was less potent in altering performance responses and inflammation compared to the first injection, indicating that repeated injections of LPS amy cause the chicks to become refractory to that stimulus. The fish meal diets resulted in poorer performance than similar levels of lipid provided as fish oil. Lower levels of dietary fish oil were more efficacious in improving broiler performance than higher levels, and fish oil provided from fish meal was not as efficacious as oil per se, possibly due to nonlipid components of the meal.


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