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Poultry Science, Vol 80, Issue 11, 1549-1553
Copyright © 2001 by Poultry Science Association


Articles

Eimeria tenella infection in chickens: effect on plasma and muscle 3-methylhistidine

RH Fetterer and PC Allen

Parasite Biology, Epidemiology and Systematics Laboratory, Animal and Natural Resources Institute, United States Department of Agriculture, Henry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center, Beltsville, Maryland, USA. rfetterer@ANRI.barc.usda.gov

To assess muscle breakdown during avian coccidiosis, the level of the nonmetabolizable amino acid 3-methylhistidine (3MH) was determined in muscle and plasma from chickens infected with the cecal parasite Eimeria tenella. The change in 3MH level during infection was determined in birds, each inoculated with 0 to 200,000 sporulated oocysts. The effect of levels of parasitism was evaluated at 6 d postinoculation. The 3MH levels of plasma and muscle were determined by HPLC after derivatization with fluorescamine. Weight gains, packed cell volumes, and gross lesion scores were also determined. E. tenella infected birds with lesion scores of 3 or 4 had significantly elevated plasma and muscle 3MH, whereas infected birds with lesion scores of 0, 1, or 2 did not have elevated plasma and muscle 3MH; however, there was a linear inverse relationship between weight gain and both plasma and muscle 3MH. The results suggested that muscle breakdown, as assessed by plasma and muscle levels of 3MH, was elevated during the acute stage of E. tenella infection and was most likely associated with anorexia caused by infection. However, the correlation of 3MH levels with severity of infection was not as strong as that previously observed for E. acervulina infection, most likely due to the differences in pathology caused by the two species.


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J. Gao, H. Lin, Z. G. Song, and H. C. Jiao
Corticosterone Alters Meat Quality by Changing Pre-and Postslaughter Muscle Metabolism
Poult. Sci., August 1, 2008; 87(8): 1609 - 1617.
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