PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers determine digestibility of blood products as feed in weanling pigs

2013-09-05
(Press-News.org) URBANA, Ill. - Because weanling pigs do not tolerate great quantities of soybean meal in the diet, alternative sources of protein must be used. Blood products, such as blood meal and plasma protein, are common ingredients in weanling pig diets and are considered high-quality sources of amino acids. Researchers at the University of Illinois have determined the amino acid digestibility of five blood products produced in the U.S. to provide swine producers with guidance for the use of these products in formulating diets.

"Blood meal usually is considered a good source of amino acids, but we don't know how the different blood products compare, and we don't know how the drying procedures influence digestibility," said Hans H. Stein, a U of I professor in animal sciences. "So that was what we wanted to determine."

To determine amino acid digestibility values, Stein and his team fed weanling pigs diets containing one of five different blood products. They used three spray-dried products: whole animal blood, blood cells, and blood plasma protein. They also tested two flash-dried products: avian blood meal and porcine blood meal. The researchers compared these blood products with each other and with casein.

The digestibility of crude protein and all amino acids in spray dried blood products were greater than or equal to that of casein. Digestibility values did not differ among the spray-dried products with the exception of isoleucine, which was less digestible in spray-dried blood cells than in spray-dried animal blood.

"The digestibility of amino acids in all the spray-dried products was very high. It was actually as good as casein in all cases, so whether it was spray-dried animal blood, or blood cells, or blood plasma, amino acids were virtually 100 percent digestible," Stein said.

Flash drying, however, appeared to damage amino acids and reduce their digestibility. Amino acid digestibility values in both avian blood meal and porcine blood meal were about one-third less than those of spray-dried products.

These findings will help producers and feed companies determine the value of the blood products they use in weanling pigs diets. "The spray dried products are very good sources of amino acids for pigs," Stein said. "But if producers buy flash-dried blood meal, they should pay less than for the spray-dried products because it doesn't have nearly the same value in diets fed to pigs."

### The study, "Comparative amino acid digestibility in US blood products fed to weanling pigs," was published in Animal Feed Science and Technology and was co-authored by Ferdinando Almeida of U of I, John Htoo of Evonik Industries AG, and John Thomson of Evonik Degussa Corporation. The manuscript is available at http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0377840113000588. Evonik Industries provided funding for this research.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Deep-ocean carbon sinks

2013-09-05
Although microbes that live in the so-called "dark ocean"—below a depth of some 600 feet where light doesn't penetrate—may not absorb enough carbon to curtail global warming, they do absorb considerable amounts of carbon and merit further study. That is one of the findings of a paper published in the International Society of Microbial Ecology (ISME) Journal by Tim Mattes, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering in the University of Iowa College of Engineering, and his colleagues. Mattes says that while many people are familiar with the concept of ...

DNA changes during pregnancy persist into childhood

2013-09-05
Even before they are born, babies accumulate changes in their DNA through a process called DNA methylation that may interfere with gene expression, and in turn, their health as they grow up. But until now it's been unclear just how long these changes during the prenatal period persist. In a new study, researchers at the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health at the Mailman School of Public Health establish that signs of DNA methylation persist through early childhood, suggesting the factors that influence these changes during or before pregnancy could have ...

Hibernating lemurs hint at the secrets of sleep

2013-09-05
DURHAM, N.C. -- By studying hibernation, a Duke University team is providing a window into why humans sleep. Observations of a little-known primate called the fat-tailed dwarf lemur in captivity and the wild has revealed that it goes for days without the deepest part of sleep during its winter hibernation season. The findings support the idea that sleep plays a role in regulating body temperature and metabolism. Despite decades of research, why we sleep is still a mystery. Theories range from conserving energy, to processing information and memories, to removing toxins ...

Exercise may reduce the risk of epilepsy later in life for men

2013-09-05
MINNEAPOLIS -- New research suggests that men who exercise vigorously as young adults may reduce their risk of developing epilepsy later in life. The study is published in the September 4, 2013, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Epilepsy is a brain disease that causes repeated seizures over time. "There are a host of ways exercise has been shown to benefit the brain and reduce the risk of brain diseases," said study author Elinor Ben-Menachem, PhD, MD, with the University of Gothenburg in Sweden and an associate member ...

Biology texts geared toward pre-med students, analysis finds

2013-09-05
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- College biology textbooks cater to the needs of pre-med majors and not those of the majority of students who take introductory science classes, a new study reveals. A text analysis of eight commonly used biology textbooks found that all of them closely follow the curriculum suggested for pre-med students by the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT). That means the texts put a heavy emphasis on molecular and cellular biology, while giving less attention to the big issues that have more relevance to students who don't plan on being medical doctors, ...

Look at what I'm saying

2013-09-05
University of Utah bioengineers discovered our understanding of language may depend more heavily on vision than previously thought: under the right conditions, what you see can override what you hear. These findings suggest artificial hearing devices and speech-recognition software could benefit from a camera, not just a microphone. "For the first time, we were able to link the auditory signal in the brain to what a person said they heard when what they actually heard was something different. We found vision is influencing the hearing part of the brain to change your ...

Only known hibernating primate has unique sleep patterns

2013-09-05
Fat-tailed dwarf lemurs are the only primates known to hibernate, and new research suggests their sleep patterns during hibernation are markedly different from those of ground squirrels, which also hibernate at similar temperatures. The results are published September 4 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Andrew Krystal and colleagues from Duke University School of Medicine and the Duke Lemur Center. During hibernation, dwarf lemurs experience periods of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep at relatively high ambient temperatures, but no non-REM sleep. Ground squirrels, ...

Ashtray availability, signage may determine success of smoke-free legislation

2013-09-05
Signs banning smoking may not have as much of an impact on secondhand smoke concentrations as the presence of ashtrays or ashtray equivalents, according to research published September 4 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Constantine Vardavas from the Harvard School of Public Health and colleagues from other institutions. The authors measured the success of a non-enforced, nationwide smoke-free legislation in Greece by testing levels of secondhand smoke before the ban and for two years afterward. Following the 2010 legislation, secondhand smoke concentrations dropped ...

Northeastern US forests transformed by human activity over 400 years

2013-09-05
Forests in the northeastern US have been radically transformed over the last four centuries by human activity, and their relationship with climate factors like rainfall weakened, according to research published September 4 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Jonathan Thompson and colleagues from the Smithsonian Institution. Though the land use history of the northeastern United States is well documented, its ecological consequences remain poorly understood. Based on more than 300,000 references to individual trees within colonial-era property records, the researchers ...

Relationship of kidney function estimates to risk improves by measuring cystatin C in the blood

2013-09-05
A new, international study from the Chronic Kidney Disease Prognosis Consortium found that use of blood levels of cystatin C to estimate kidney function—alone or in combination with creatinine—strengthens the association between kidney function and risks of death and end-stage renal disease. The findings, reported in the September 5 edition of the New England Journal of Medicine, suggest that the use of cystatin C as a measurement of kidney function could lead to better staging and risk classification of chronic kidney disease. They also suggest that the measurement ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New insights into seasonal shifts in sleep

Estimating microbial biomass from air-dried soils: A safer, scalable approach

AI in healthcare needs patient-centred regulation to avoid discrimination – new commentary

A good soak in a hot tub might beat a sauna for health benefits

Surgery plus speech therapy linked to improved language after stroke

GP performance pay fails to drive lasting changes in quality of care

Focusing on weight loss alone for obesity may do more harm than good

In sub-Saharan Africa, 1 in 6 cancer medications found to be defective

Newborns require better care to improve survival and long-term health

EMBARGOED: New study shows almost half of hospital patients in Malawi and Tanzania have multiple health conditions

People with symptoms of chronic lung disease in Kenya face ‘catastrophic’ health costs

Sylvester Cancer Tip Sheet - June 2025

UC Davis and Proteus Space to launch first-ever dynamic digital twin into space

Olympians' hearts in focus: groundbreaking study reveals elite rowers' surprising AFib risk

Common medicine for autoimmune diseases works on giant cell arteritis

Your neighborhood may be tied to risk of inflammation, dementia biomarkers

AAN issues position statement on possible therapies for neurological conditions

Liver organoid breakthrough: Generating organ-specific blood vessels

LRA awards 2025 Lupus Insight Prize to Dr. Deepak Rao for uncovering key drivers of immune imbalance in lupus

Terasaki Institute’s Dr. Yangzhi Zhu recognized as 2024 Biosensors Young Investigator Award Recipient

NAU researchers launch open-source robotic exoskeleton to help people walk

Early farmers in the Andes were doing just fine, challenging popular theory

Seeing men as the “default” may be tied to attitudes to politicians, Black people

Risk of crime rises when darkness falls

Data from Poland, Indonesia and Nepal indicate that affectionate behavior is associated with higher relationship satisfaction - though cultural differences impact how affection is displayed and percei

"Boomerang" made from mammoth tusk is likely one of the oldest known in Europe at around 40,000 years old, per analysis of this artifact from a Polish Upper Paleolithic cave

"Shrinking" cod: how humans have altered the genetic make-up of fish

Nitrate in drinking water linked to preterm birth rates

Ancient canoe replica tests Paleolithic migration theory

Eight-month-old babies can adapt their learning style to change

[Press-News.org] Researchers determine digestibility of blood products as feed in weanling pigs