Publication | Open Access
BODY COMPOSITION AND GLYCOGEN RESERVES IN THE NEONATAL PIG DURING THE FIRST 96 HOURS POSTPARTUM
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Citations
18
References
1977
Year
NutritionFourteen Yorkshire SowsMammalian PhysiologyTrace MineralsExperimental NutritionHours PostpartumBody CompositionMaternal NutritionPublic HealthHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyNutrient PhysiologyAnimal NutritionNutritional ResponsePregnancy NutritionAnimal SciencePhysiologyFeed IntakeMuscle Glycogen LevelsNutritional ScienceMetabolism
Fourteen Yorkshire sows were given either 0.45 or 2.27 kg feed per day from day 100 of gestation until farrowing to determine if short-term nutritional stress during late pregnancy affected the energy reserves or body composition of their piglets at birth or during the early postnatal period (96 h). The diets were formulated so that the intake of trace minerals and vitamins in both groups was the same. Level of feeding from day 100 of gestation affected significantly (P <.01) the weight change of the sows to farrowing, but not birthweight of the piglets, their muscle glycogen levels or their body composition. Piglets from sows fed 2.27 kg/day had significantly (P <.05) higher liver glycogen levels at birth, but this advantage had disappeared by 6 h postpartum. Level of prepartum feeding did not affect the rate of utilization of glycogen by the piglets postpartum. Percentages of fat and protein in the piglets increased and those of water and NFE decreased significantly [Formula: see text] during the 96-h postpartum period.
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