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Effect of dietary fat level on dose response relationships during aflatoxicosis in young chickens

The effect of aflatoxin in poultry is greater on birds fed a low fat diet, but it is not known whether this effect is associated with a lower apparent minimum effective dose (MED), altered slope of the response curve, or both. Aflatoxin at 16 dosages ranging from 0 to 3.797 micrograms/g of feed was...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Poultry science 1987-09, Vol.66 (9), p.1470-1478
Main Authors: Richardson, K.E, Nelson, L.A, Hamilton, P.B
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The effect of aflatoxin in poultry is greater on birds fed a low fat diet, but it is not known whether this effect is associated with a lower apparent minimum effective dose (MED), altered slope of the response curve, or both. Aflatoxin at 16 dosages ranging from 0 to 3.797 micrograms/g of feed was fed to six groups of 15 young chickens per treatment ingesting a 2 or 4% fat diet for 3 wk. The weights of the body, liver, bursa of Fabricius, and spleen and the total lipid content of the liver were measured. Mathematical models were fitted to the data and dose-response curves were predicted as continuous functions of aflatoxin concentration. Quadratic polynomials fit body weight and spleen weight whereas plateau-linear models fit liver weight and liver lipid content in both 2 and 4% fat diets. The weight of the bursa of Fabricius was fit equally well by quadratic and linear plateau models. Dietary fat had negligible effects on the apparent MED (micrograms of aflatoxin per gram of feed) for body, liver and spleen weights, which were calculated from the modeling approach to be 1.37 and 1.41, 1.68 and 1.69, and 1.49 and 1.46 on 2 and 4% fat diets, respectively. The apparent MED for liver lipid content was appreciably lower for birds fed the 2% fat diet than those fed the 4% fat diet (.88 and 1.62, respectively). Similarly, the apparent MED for the bursa was 1.48 and 1.74 for birds fed the 2 and 4% fat diets, respectively.
ISSN:0032-5791
1525-3171
DOI:10.3382/ps.0661470