7 results on '"den Hartog, L. A."'
Search Results
2. Dietary fibre enrichment of supplemental feed modulates the development of the intestinal tract in suckling piglets
- Author
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Van Hees, H. M. J., Davids, M., Maes, D., Millet, S., Possemiers, S., den Hartog, L. A., van Kempen, T. A. T. G., and Janssens, G. P. J.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Supplementing oat hulls to the diet of suckling piglets altered their intestinal tract and colonic microbiota development.
- Author
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van Hees, H. M. J., Chiers, K., den Hartog, L. A., van Kempen, T. A. T. G., Maes, D., Millet, S., and Janssens, G. P. J.
- Subjects
PIGLETS ,DIET ,INTESTINES ,GASTROINTESTINAL system ,OATS ,SMALL intestine ,GASTRIC mucosa - Abstract
The article presents a study which investigates the effects of fine and coarse oat hulls (OH) on gastrointestinal development in suckling piglets. It shares the result of the study showing the diet did not affect stomach pH or digestibility of substrates, increased ileal villi length particularly in the piglets fed a finely ground OH diet, and exhibits similar digestive capacity and small intestinal barrier across diets.
- Published
- 2023
4. Feed intake patterns nor growth rates of pigs are affected by dietary resistant starch, despite marked differences in digestion.
- Author
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van Erp, R. J. J., de Vries, S., van Kempen, T. A. T. G., Den Hartog, L. A., and Gerrits, W. J. J.
- Abstract
Current feed evaluation systems often assume that fermented starch (i.e. resistant starch (RS)) yields less energy than digested starch. However, growth rates of pigs fed low and high RS diets are often the same when feed is available ad libitum. This may be explained by its effect on digestive processes changing feeding behavior, and consequently energy utilization. This study aims to investigate the effect of RS on nutrient digestion and digesta passage rate in pigs, in combination with its effect on feeding behavior and growth performance under ad libitum conditions. In experiment 1, 20 male pigs (40 ± 2.82 kg) were fed diets containing either 50% waxy maize starch (low in RS (LRS)) or high-amylose maize starch (high in RS (HRS)), and soluble and insoluble indigestible markers. After 14 days of adaptation to the diets, pigs were fed hourly to reach steady state (6 h), dissected, and digesta were collected from eight segments. From the collected samples, nutrient digestion and passage rate of the solid and liquid digesta fraction were determined. In experiment 2, 288 pigs (80 ± 0.48 kg; sex ratio per pen 1 : 1; boar : gilt) were housed in groups of 6. Pigs were ad libitum-fed one of the experimental diets, and slaughtered at approximately 115 kg. Feed intake, growth and carcass parameters were measured. Ileal starch digestibility was greater for LRS-fed than for HRS-fed pigs (98.0% v. 74.0%; P < 0.001), where the additional undigested starch in HRS-fed pigs was fermented in the large intestine. No effects of RS on digesta passage rate of the solid or liquid digesta fraction and on feeding behavior were observed. Growth rate and feed intake did not differ between diets, whereas feed efficiency of HRS-fed pigs was 1%-unit higher than that of LRS-fed pigs (P = 0.041). The efficiency of feed used for carcass gain did not differ between diets indicating that the difference in feed efficiency was determined by the non-carcass fraction. Despite a 30% greater RS intake (of total starch) with HRS than with LRS, carcass gain and feed efficiency used for carcass gain were unaffected. RS did not affect digesta passage rate nor feeding behavior suggesting that the difference in energy intake between fermented and digested starch is compensated for post-absorptively. Our results indicate that the net energy value of fermented starch currently used in pig feed evaluation systems is underestimated and should be reconsidered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Bioavailability of α -tocopherol stereoisomers in lambs depends on dietary doses of all-rac - or RRR- α -tocopheryl acetate.
- Author
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Leal, L. N., Jensen, S. K., Bello, J. M., Den Hartog, L. A., Hendriks, W. H., and Martín-Tereso, J.
- Abstract
When supplementing lamb diets with vitamin E, an equivalence factor of 1.36 is used to discriminate between RRR- α -tocopheryl acetate and all-rac - α -tocopheryl acetate. However, more recent studies suggest a need for new equivalence factors for livestock animals. The current study aimed to determine the effect of RRR- and all-rac - α -tocopheryl acetate supplementation on α -tocopherol deposition in lamb tissues. A total of 108 Rasa Aragonesa breed lambs were fed increasing amounts of all-rac - α -tocopheryl acetate (0.25, 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 g/kg compound feed) or RRR- α -tocopheryl acetate (0.125, 0.25, 0.5 and 1.0 g/kg compound feed) by adding them to a basal diet that contained 0.025 g/kg feed of all-rac - α -tocopheryl acetate as part of the standard vitamin and mineral mixture. The diets were fed for the last 14 days before slaughtering at 25.8±1.67 kg BW. Within 20 min after slaughter samples of muscle, heart, liver, brain and spleen were frozen at −20°C until α -tocopherol analysis. Increased supplementation of either vitamin E sources led to a significant increase (P < 0.001) in α -tocopherol concentration in all tissues studied. The tissue with the highest α -tocopherol concentration was the liver followed by spleen, heart and muscle. At similar supplementation levels (0.25, 0.50 and 1.0 g/kg compound feed), α -tocopherol content in the selected tissues was not affected by α -tocopherol source. However, the ratios between RRR- and all-rac - α -tocopheryl acetate increased with the increasing α -tocopherol supplementation (at 0.25 and 1.0 g/kg compound feed), from 1.06 to 1.16 in muscle, 1.07 to 1.15 in heart, 0.91 to 0.94 in liver and 0.98 to 1.10 in spleen. The highest relative proportion of Ʃ2S (sum of SSS-, SSR-, SRS- and SRR- α -tocopherol)-configured stereoisomers was found in the liver of lambs supplemented with all-rac - α -tocopheryl acetate accounting for up to 35 to 39% of the total α -tocopherol retained, whereas the proportion of Ʃ2S-configured stereoisomers in the other tissues accounted for <14%. Increasing all-rac - α -tocopheryl acetate supplementation was also found to affect the 2R-configured stereoisomer profile in muscle, heart and spleen with increasing proportions of RRS-, RSR- and RSS- at the cost of RRR- α -tocopherol. In all tissues, the relative proportion of all non-RRR-stereoisomers in lambs receiving RRR- α -tocopheryl acetate was lower than RRR- α -tocopherol. These results confirm that the relative bioavailability of RRR- and all-rac - α -tocopheryl acetate is dose- and tissue-dependent and that a single ratio to discriminate the two sources cannot be used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Growth curve and diet density affect eating motivation, behavior, and body composition of broiler breeders during rearing.
- Author
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de los Mozos, J., García-Ruiz, A. I., den Hartog, L. A., and Villamide, M. J.
- Subjects
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BROILER chickens , *CHICKEN breeders , *DIET , *ANIMAL nutrition , *BODY composition of poultry - Abstract
The aim of this work has been to assess the effect of diet density [control (CON) or 15% diluted (DIL)] and growth curve [recommended by the genetic line (RBW) or 15% heavier (HBW)] and their interaction on BW uniformity, feeding motivation, behavior, and body composition of broiler breeder pullets. A total of 3,000 one-day-old female breeders Ross 308, distributed in 20 pens, was randomly assigned to each treatment. Feed allowance was weekly adjusted to reach the desired BW. Feed was provided as pelleted (zero to 3 wk) and crumble (4 to 19 wk). Time eating was measured at 7, 11, and 19 weeks. A feeding rate test was performed after 11 weeks. Behavior was observed at 9 and 15 wk, by visual scan. At 6, 13, and 19 wk of age, one bird/pen was slaughtered for weighing different organs and analyzing the composition of empty whole bodies. Treatments did not affect BW uniformity; relative weights of the ovary, oviduct, or gizzard; or protein content of empty BW. Time eating varied with the growth curve at 19 wk (P < 0.05), HBW pullets spent 19 more min eating than RBW pullets. DIL led to 4 and 8 more min eating at 19 wk for pullets of RBW and HBW (P < 0.05), respectively. Pullets fed DIL consumed 30% (P < 0.05) less during the feeding rate test when kept on a restricted regimen, and they had lower compensatory energy intake after ad libitum feeding than those fed CON, indicating lower feeding motivation. Behavior was affected by the age and by the time of the d measured, but it did not change with the treatments. Birds spent most time pecking objects (50%), feeding (28%), and drinking (17%). Pullets fed DIL had 8% lower breast yield at different ages and higher empty digestive tracts at 6 weeks. Body composition varied with age; fat content increased from 12.7 to 15.9 to 19.8% for 6, 13, and 19 wk, respectively. The lowest body fat was observed for RBW pullets fed DIL (P = 0.003) at 19 weeks. Feeding DIL diets to HBW pullets could be done to increase the time spent eating and reduce their feeling of hunger without negative effects on body composition. However, its influence on behavior and BW uniformity was not proved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Effect of mineral and vitamin C mix on growth performance and blood corticosterone concentrations in heat-stressed broilers.
- Author
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Saiz del Barrio, A., Mansilla, W. D., Navarro-Villa, A., Mica, J. H., Smeets, J. H., den Hartog, L. A., and García-Ruiz, A. I.
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VITAMIN C , *BROILER chickens , *DRINKING water , *POULTRY industry , *SERUM , *VITAMINS - Abstract
Heat stress is a major problem in the poultry industry, especially during summer months and when birds are raised under high-density conditions. Previous studies have reported that vitamin C or electrolyte supplementation could palliate the effects of heat stress in broiler chickens. The present study evaluated the effect of a mineral and vitamin mix (AHS) added to drinking water on the performance of broiler chickens. In total, 1,824 one-day-old birds were randomly allocated to 48 pens. Maximum animal density was 26.5 kg/m2. The control group received no additive; AHS-1 and -2 groups received the AHS mix at a concentration of 1 and 2 kg/1,000 L in drinking water, respectively; and the Vit-C group received vitamin C in drinking water at 200 g/1,000 L. All birds were fed the same diets based on a 3-phase feeding program; feed and water were given on ad libitum basis. To mimic heat stress conditions, temperature in the barn was raised to 35 C from 08:00 to 14:00 h each day. For the overall growing period (0 to 35 D), adding AHS to drinking water increased final BW, ADG, and ADFI linearly (PLinear, 0.05); FCR was decreased linearly with AHS supplementation (PLinear, 0.05). Final BW, ADG, and FCR for the Vit-C group were intermediate between AHS-2 and the control groups (P . 0.10). No significant effect on mortality were found (8.77%; P . 0.10). Relative to control, all the treatments tested reduced (P, 0.05) corticosterone concentration in blood serum. In conclusion, the combined use of supplementary levels of minerals and vitamins could alleviate the effects of heat stress on broilers chickens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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