Maternal supplementation with herbal antioxidants during pregnancy in swine
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2021Metadata
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Parraguez Gamboa, Víctor
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Maternal supplementation with herbal antioxidants during pregnancy in swine
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Abstract
The effects of a combined supplementation with herbal antioxidants during pregnancy
on reproductive traits and piglet performance (number of live, dead, and mummified newborns
and litter weight at birth and individual body weight at both birth and weaning) were assessed in a
total of 1027 sows (504 treated and 523 control females) kept under commercial breeding conditions.
The supplementation increased the number of live-born piglets (13.64 0.11 vs. 12.96 0.13 in
the controls; p = 0.001) and the total litter weight, decreasing the incidence of low-weight piglets
without affecting the number of stillbirths and mummified newborns. Such an effect was modulated
by the number of parity and the supplementation, with supplementation increasing significantly
the number of living newborns in the first, second, sixth, and seventh parities (0.87, 1.10, 1.49, and
2.51 additional piglets, respectively; p < 0.05). The evaluation of plasma vitamin concentration and
biomarkers of oxidative stress (total antioxidant capacity, TAC, and malondialdehyde concentration,
MDA) performed in a subset of farrowing sows and their lighter and heavier piglets showed that
plasma levels of both vitamins were significantly higher in the piglets than in their mothers (p < 0.05
for vitamin C and p < 0.005 for vitamin E), with antioxidant supplementation increasing significantly
such concentrations. Concomitantly, there were no differences in maternal TAC but significantly
higher values in piglets from supplemented sows (p < 0.05). On the other hand, supplementation
decreased plasma MDA levels both in the sows and their piglets (p < 0.05). Finally, the piglets from
supplemented mothers showed a trend for a higher weaning weight (p = 0.066) and, specifically,
piglets with birth weights above 1 kg showed a 7.4% higher weaning weight (p = 0.024). Hence, the
results of the present study, with high robustness and translational value by offering data from more
than 1000 pregnancies under standard breeding conditions, supports that maternal supplementation
with herbal antioxidants during pregnancy significantly improves reproductive efficiency, litter traits,
and piglet performance.
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Agroservice (Chile)
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Artículo de publícación WoS
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Antioxidants 2021, 10, 658.
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