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Choline supplementation: Impact on broiler chicken performance, steatosis, and economic viability from from 1 to 42 days. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared the effects of synthetic and natural choline supplementation on the growth and health of broiler chickens, focusing on performance, carcass quality, blood parameters, and liver health.
  • A total of 1050 Cobb 500 broiler chicks were assigned to 10 different treatment groups with varying dosages of choline sources, including a control group with no supplementation.
  • Results showed that natural choline source A (NCA) led to better body weight gain and feed efficiency compared to synthetic choline chloride and natural choline sources B, highlighting NCA's potential to enhance broiler performance without sacrificing liver health.

Article Abstract

This study was carried out to compare the impact of choline supplementation (available from two sources synthetic and natural) on various dosages in broilers. The mode of choline supplementation, via diet and additional sources, synthetic and natural, and the data of performance, carcass quality, blood parameters, and hepatic steatosis were compared. A total of 1050 day-old male Cobb 500 broiler chicks were randomly assigned to 10 treatments, using a completely randomized design model in a factorial scheme, with 6 replicates per treatment and 25 birds per replicate. Choline was supplemented using three sources: synthetic choline chloride 60% (CC), and two sources of natural choline A (NCA), and B (NCB). The Control treatment did not receive any choline supplementation. The diets were supplemented with low, intermediate and high doses of choline sources (400g/t, 800g/t, and 1200g/t of CC; 100g/t, 200g/t, and 300g/t of both NCA and NCB). Data analysis was performed using a factorial model to investigate the effects of choline supplementation (CC, NCA, NCB) and doses on the measured variables. Overall, the results indicated that the the performance of NCA was better than CC & NCB, specifically the dose of 100g/t of NCA outperformed MAR at 100g/t & CC at 400g/t, leading to a significant increase in body weight gain (85.66g & 168.84g respectively), and a noteworthy (9- & 12-point respectively) improvement in feed conversion ratio. Furthermore, NCA contributed to a reduction in steatosis when contrasted with various NCB & CC doses, likely due to the presence of curcumins and catechins in the natural choline source. These findings demonstrated that NCA supplementation yielded superior results compared to CC and NCB across both performance and liver health aspects in broilers aged 1 to 42 days. In conclusion, NCA can be used to replace the CC 60% without compromise on the zootechnical performance in broilers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10950236PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0295488PLOS

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