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Food, fibre and pharmaceuticals from animals
RESEARCH ARTICLE

A dietary sodium gluconate supplement improves growth performance and prebiotic activity in the small intestine of nursery pigs grown under tropical conditions

T. Poeikhampha A and C. Bunchasak A B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Department of Animal Science, Faculty of Agriculture, Kasetsart University, Bangkok, Thailand.

B Corresponding author. Email: agrchb@ku.ac.th

Animal Production Science 51(8) 702-707 https://doi.org/10.1071/AN10284
Submitted: 29 December 2010  Accepted: 1 June 2011   Published: 5 August 2011

Abstract

This study was conducted to evaluate the effect of sodium gluconate (SG) supplementation in diets on growth performance, small intestinal morphology and short chain fatty acid concentration in the caecum of nursery pigs. One-hundred and forty-four piglets (bodyweight ~10.5 kg) were raised in conventional open housing and divided into four treatments with six replications. The pigs received diet supplemented without (control), or with SG at a level of 1000, 2500 or 5000 ppm for 6 weeks. The results indicated that increasing SG supplementation from 0 to 5000 ppm linearly improved final bodyweight, average daily gain, feed : gain ratio, caecal propionic acid and total short-chain fatty acid concentration (linear P < 0.05). Adding SG in diet tended to reduce Escherichia coli counts in the caecum (P = 0.09) and adding SG at 2500–5000 ppm significantly increased the villous height in the duodenum (linear, P < 0.01), whereas there were no increase in caecal acetic acid and lactic acid bacterial counts in the caecum and rectum, and E. coli counts in the rectum when compared with the control group. SG supplementation did not affect the pH values in gastrointestinal tract of nursery pigs. This study implied that SG supplementation improved growth rate and may be useful as a prebiotic to accomplish the maximum growth performances in nursery pigs.

Additional keyword: microflora.


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