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Development and regression of soybean meal induced enteritis in Atlantic salmon, <i>Salmo salar</i> L., distal intestine: a comparison with the intestines of fasted fish
505
Citations
30
References
1996
Year
NutritionGastroenterologyPathologyDigestive TractAtlantic SalmonAquatic Food SystemAquacultureFish ImmunologyDistal IntestineSoybean MealPublic HealthAnimal PhysiologyMucosal FoldsAnimal NutritionFood DigestionExperimental DietsFish FarmingBiologyPhysiologyMetabolismMedicine
Abstract The development of a pathological condition in the distal intestine of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L., induced by dietary soybean meal, was studied in a 6‐week feeding experiment. The fully developed condition, as observed after 3 weeks on the experimental diets, was characterized by: (1) a shortening of heights of the mucosal foldings; (2) a loss of the normal supranuclear vacuolization of the absorptive cells in the intestinal epithelium; (3) a widening of the central stroma within the mucosal foldings, with increased amounts of connective tissue; and (4) a profound infiltration of inflammatory cells in the lamina propria. The first signs of morphological changes were observed after 2 days on a diet containing a solvent extracted soybean meal, and within 7 days, all the above mentioned signs were observed. When the fish were subsequently transferred to a control diet, the mucosal folds were rebuilt from the base, resulting in an apparently functional epithelium after 3 weeks. Starved fish also exhibited characteristic changes of the mucosa, including a finely granular cytoplasm replacing the supranuclear vacuoles seen in the epithelial cells of normal fish. In addition, a pattern of irregularly spaced indentations developed in the epithelium of the simple folds. The condition induced by dietary soybean meal was classified as a no n‐infectious subacute enteritis, and a pathogenesis involving immunological mechanisms is suggested.
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