The effect of the quality of roughage on the course of Trypanosoma vivax infection in West African dwarf goats: II. Metabolic profile, packed cell volume, and pathology of disease

Autor: van Dam, J.T.P., van der Heide, D., van den Ingh, T.S.G.A.M., Wensing, T., Zwart, D.
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 1998
Předmět:
Zdroj: Livestock Production Science 53 (1998)
Livestock Production Science, 53, 81-90
ISSN: 0301-6226
Popis: Effects of trypanosome infection and feed quality on the metabolism of trypanotolerant West African Dwarf goats were measured. Goats were allotted to either a diet of lucerne pellets (Crude protein level = 172 g/kg DM; n = 14) or a diet of chopped grass straw (Crude protein level = 68 g/kg DM; n = 15). Five animals per feed group served as controls, and the other animals were infected with Trypanosoma vivax parasites. Before and after infection, blood samples were taken weekly, and analyzed for packed cell volume and parasitaemia, and for serum metabolites and hormone concentrations. Six weeks after infection, the goats were killed and post mortem analysis was carried out to study the pathology of disease. Infected animals showed reduced feed intake, increased plasma nonesterified fatty acids concentration, and decreased serum insulin concentration. Liver triacylglycerol concentration was increased in all grass straw fed animals, and some infected goats fed the lucerne feed. Infection drastically reduced serum concentration of thyroxine and triiodothyronine. Infection caused an increased weight of the liver and prescapular lymph nodes in animals from both feed treatments, but lymph nodes were more enlarged in infected animals fed lucerne. Pathological findings were typical for T. vivax infection in goats, irrespective of feed type. Packed cell volume was reduced by infection in both feed groups to values below 20 percentage points. Serum γ-globulin concentration was increased more in infected animals, fed lucerne than those fed grass straw. It was concluded, that by maintaining a feed with a higher protein level, the nutritional status of infected West African Dwarf goats was improved. This was reflected in the serum concentrations of some metabolites and hormones. However, in general, no indications of an interaction between infection and feed type with respect to nutritional status were found. Differences in feed quality did not change the nature and severity of pathological variables, measured at autopsy after 6 weeks of infection.
Databáze: OpenAIRE