Effect of sex and milk replacer with or without supplemental carnitine and arginine on growth characteristics, carcass, and meat quality of artificially reared low-birth weight pigs

Johannes G. Madsen, Michael Kreuzer, Paolo Silacci, Giuseppe Bee*

*Corresponding author af dette arbejde

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Abstract

This study compared milk replacer either remaining unsupplemented (CON) or supplemented with 0.5 g L-carnitine plus 16.7 g L-Arginine/kg (CarArg) and fed to 48 low-birth weight (L-BtW) artificially reared piglets (24 per group) from days 7 to 28 of age. Eight farrowing series were needed to complete the study. On day 28, the lightest piglets were slaughtered, and the heaviest pigs were weaned. The heaviest pigs were weaned on day 28 and offered free access to a starter (weaning to 25 kg body weight [BW]), grower (25 to 60 kg BW), and finisher diet (60 to 96 kg BW on day 170 of age). After euthanization on days 28 and 170, blood was sampled for assessment of serum metabolite and hormone concentrations, and the semitendinosus muscle (STM) was weighed, and later subjected to enzyme activity analysis and assessment of myofiber characteristics. In the 170-d-old pigs carcass and meat quality traits were assessed. Growth data were analyzed accordingtoatwo-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), with dietary treatment and farrowing series as fixed effects, while remaining data were analyzed with dietary treatment, sex, their interaction, and farrowing series as main factors. Dietary treatments affected (P≤0.049) muscle enzyme activity at both day 28, with greater citrate synthase (CS) and LDH activities and lower HAD:CS ratio in STM light portion, and lower LDH:CS ratio in STM dark portion, and 170 of age with lower HAD:CS ratio. In the starter period, CarArg pigs had greater average daily gain (P=0.021) and average daily feed intake (P=0.010). At slaughter, these pigs had lower (P=0.013) glucose and greater (P=0.022) urea serum concentrations. However, supplementing the milk replacer with carnitine and arginine had no long-Term effects on growth performance, carcass composition, and meat quality of L-BtW pigs. In addition, muscle morphology and myofiber-related properties remained unaffected by the supplementation.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummerskae122
TidsskriftJournal of Animal Science
Vol/bind102
Antal sider13
ISSN0021-8812
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2024

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank Guy Maikoff and his staff for their excellent work in the piggery, and the staff of the laboratory for their valuable support. This study is part of ECO-FCE and has received funding from the European Union\u2019s Seventh Framework Program for Research, Technological Development and Demonstration (ECO-FCE Grant/Award Number: KBBE.2012.1.3-03).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society of Animal Science.

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