Literature DB >> 1317562

Studies to determine whether an interaction exists among boron, calcium, and cholecalciferol on the skeletal development of broiler chickens.

M A Elliot1, H M Edwards.   

Abstract

Two experiments were designed to determine the effect of dietary boron on broiler cockerels and four experiments were conducted to determine whether an interaction exists among dietary boron, cholecalciferol, and calcium. The parameters measured were weight gain, feed efficiency, tibia bone ash, rickets, tibial dyschondroplasia, and plasma minerals. All experiments were conducted with tibial dyschondroplasia-inducing basal diets fed to broiler cockerels from 1 to 16 days of age. Experiments 1 and 2 had four levels of dietary boron (0, 20, 40, and 80 mg/kg (Experiment 1) and 0, 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg (Experiment 2). Boron had no effect on weight gain, feed efficiency, or plasma minerals in either experiment. In Experiment 2, increasing levels of boron had no influence on tibial dyschondroplasia but did exert a quadratic effect on bone ash with 5 and 10 mg/kg boron increasing bone ash. In Experiment 1, bone ash and the incidence of tibial dyschondroplasia were unaffected, but the severity of tibial dyschondroplasia linearly increased by increasing boron levels. Experiments 3 to 6 had a 2 x 2 x 2 factorial arrangement of treatments with calcium at .65 and .90%, cholecalciferol at 110 and 1,100 ICU/kg, and boron at 0 and 40 mg/kg (Experiments 3 to 5) or 0 and 3 mg/kg (Experiment 6). The higher levels of calcium and cholecalciferol improved weight gain, decreased the incidence of rickets, and decreased the incidence and severity of tibial dyschondroplasia. Feeding cholecalciferol at 1,100 ICU/kg increased plasma calcium and plasma dialyzable phosphorus and decreased plasma magnesium. Calcium at .90% had no effect on plasma magnesium or plasma dialyzable phosphorus and increased plasma calcium only in Experiment 4. The only response to boron in Experiments 3 to 6 was a boron effect and a boron by cholecalciferol interaction on bone ash in Experiment 3, in which boron reduced bone ash at .65% calcium and 110 ICU/kg cholecalciferol. From these experiments, there is no indication that an interaction among boron, cholecalciferol, and calcium exists in broiler cockerels.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1317562     DOI: 10.3382/ps.0710677

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Poult Sci        ISSN: 0032-5791            Impact factor:   3.352


  2 in total

1.  Zebrafish as a Model to Unveil the Pro-Osteogenic Effects of Boron-Vitamin D3 Synergism.

Authors:  Jerry Maria Sojan; Manu Kumar Gundappa; Alessio Carletti; Vasco Gaspar; Paulo Gavaia; Francesca Maradonna; Oliana Carnevali
Journal:  Front Nutr       Date:  2022-04-29

2.  Effects of boron supplementation to diets deficient in calcium and phosphorus on performance with some serum, bone and fecal characteristics of broiler chickens.

Authors:  Mehmet Bozkurt; Kamil Küçükyılmaz; Abdullah Uğur Catlı; Mustafa Cınar; Metin Cabuk; Erol Bintaş
Journal:  Asian-Australas J Anim Sci       Date:  2012-02-01       Impact factor: 2.509

  2 in total

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