Probiotics have been demonstrated to be useful to enhance gut health and prevent gastrointestinal infections in humans. Additionally, some multi-strain probiotic combinations have been suggested to have greater efficacy than single strains. The objective of this study is to demonstrate the potential of a combination of the probiotic strains: subsp. (brand name IM1) and subsp. BPL6 to enhance gut health and to ameliorate the outcome of a challenge using a weaning piglet model. Seventy-two 28-day-old weanling piglets, 7.7 (±0.28) kg of body-weight, were distributed in a 2 × 2 factorial design; treated or not with the probiotic combination and challenged or not with the pathogen. Animals were orally challenged after an adaptation period (Day 8) with a single dose (5 × 10 cfu) of Typhimurium. One animal per pen was euthanized on Day 12 (Day 4 post-inoculation [PI]) and Day 16 (Day 8 PI). All parameters responded to the challenge and 4 deaths were registered, indicating a severe but self-limiting challenge. Improvements registered in the challenged animals due to the probiotic were: increased voluntary feed-intake ( probiotic × challenge = 0.078), reduced fecal excretion of ( = 0.028 at Day 1 PI and < 0.10 at Days 3 and 5 PI), decreased rectal temperature ( probiotic × day = 0.048) and improvements in the villous:crypt ratio ( probiotic × challenge < 0.001). Moreover, general probiotic benefits were observed in both challenged and non-challenged groups: decreased diarrhea scores of the PI period ( = 0.014), improved fermentation profiles on Day 8 PI (increased ileal acetic acid [ = 0.008] and a tendency to lower colonic ammonia concentrations [ = 0.078]), stimulation of intestinal immune response by increasing villous intraepithelial lymphocytes ( = 0.015 on Day 8 PI) and an improved villous:crypt ratio ( = 0.011). In conclusion, the multi-strain probiotic had a positive effect on reducing pathogen loads and alleviating animals in a challenge. In addition, enhanced gut health and immunity was recorded in all animals receiving the probiotic, indicating an improvement in the post-weaning outcome.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5559543PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01570DOI Listing

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