Author:
JOHANSEN M. V.,BØGH H. O.,GIVER H.,ERIKSEN L.,NANSEN P.,STEPHENSON L.,KNUDSEN K. E. B.
Abstract
The aim of the study was to measure the impact of Schistosoma
japonicum and Trichuris suis infections in young growing
pigs fed low- or high-protein diets. Thirty-two pigs, 6–10 weeks
old, were randomly allocated to 2 groups receiving either
a high- or a low-protein diet. After 11 weeks half of the pigs from
each group were infected with 1500 S. japonicum
cercariae and 4000 T. suis eggs. The weight of the pigs was
measured throughout the study, and blood and faecal samples
were collected every second week from the time of infection. At the time
of infection the low-protein pigs had significantly
lower mean body weights, haemoglobin and albumin levels compared with
the high-protein pigs, and this pattern
continued throughout the study. The serum albumin concentration was
further significantly reduced in the infected low-protein pigs compared
to
the non-infected low-protein pigs. Significantly more S. japonicum
worms as well as faecal and
tissue eggs were found in the low-protein pigs compared with the
high-protein pigs. No differences between the 2 diet
groups were observed in T. suis establishment rates or faecal
egg excretion. We conclude that this low-protein diet increased
the establishment rates of S. japonicum, favoured larger
deposits of S. japonicum eggs in the liver and faecal egg excretion,
reduced weight gains and caused anaemia and hypoalbuminaemia in young
growing pigs as compared with a high-protein diet.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
25 articles.
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