| Literature DB >> 32722335 |
Sanjeev Wasti1, Nirvay Sah1, Birendra Mishra1.
Abstract
Heat stress is one of the major environmental stressors in the poultry industry resulting in substantial economic loss. Heat stress causes several physiological changes, such as oxidative stress, acid-base imbalance, and suppressed immunocompetence, which leads to increased mortality and reduced feed efficiency, body weight, feed intake, and egg production, and also affects meat and egg quality. Several strategies, with a variable degree of effectiveness, have been implemented to attenuate heat stress in poultry. Nutritional strategies, such as restricting the feed, wet or dual feeding, adding fat in diets, supplementing vitamins, minerals, osmolytes, and phytochemicals, have been widely studied and found to reduce the deleterious effects of heat stress. Furthermore, the use of naked neck (Na) and frizzle (F) genes in certain breed lines have also gained massive attention in recent times. However, only a few of these strategies have been widely used in the poultry industry. Therefore, developing heat-tolerant breed lines along with proper management and nutritional approach needs to be considered for solving this problem. Thus, this review highlights the scientific evidence regarding the effects of heat stress on poultry health and performances, and potential mitigation strategies against heat stress in broiler chickens and laying hens.Entities:
Keywords: heat stress; mitigation; oxidative stress; physiological changes; poultry
Year: 2020 PMID: 32722335 PMCID: PMC7460371 DOI: 10.3390/ani10081266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Figure 1Effects of heat stress on behavioral, physiological, neuroendocrine, and production traits.
Figure 2Schematic diagram showing the redox system. (A) Normal condition, and (B) under heat stress.
Figure 3Schematic diagram showing an acid-base imbalance in poultry under heat stress.
Summary of the beneficial effects of vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals, and osmolytes in heat-stressed poultry.
| Supplements | Beneficial Effects on Heat-Stressed Birds | References |
|---|---|---|
| Vitamin E |
prevent liver damage, facilitate the synthesis and release of vitellogenin; ↑ egg production in laying hen | [ |
|
↓ liver and serum MDA concentration; ↑ increased serum and liver vitamin E and A concentration in broilers | [ | |
| Vitamin A |
↑ egg weight in laying hens | [ |
|
↑ live weight gain, improved feed efficiency and ↓ serum MDA concentration in broilers | [ | |
| Vitamin C |
improved growth rate, nutrient utilization, egg production, and quality, immune response, and antioxidant status in poultry | [ |
|
↓ serum concentration of MDA, homocysteine, and adrenal corticotrophin hormone in Japanese quail | [ | |
|
improved body weight gain and FCR in broilers | [ | |
| Zinc |
improved body mass growth, ↓ level of the lipid peroxide, ↑ activity of SOD in broilers | [ |
|
improved live weight gain, feed intake, and hot and chilled dressing percentage in quails | [ | |
|
↓ MDA concentration, ↑ serum vitamin C and vitamin E level, ↑ egg production in Japanese quail | [ | |
|
improved eggshell thickness and mitigate the eggshell defects in laying hens | [ | |
| Chromium |
↑ body weight, feed intake, and carcass quality; ↓ level of serum corticosterone concentration; ↓ serum glucose and cholesterol concentration; ↑ serum insulin level in broilers. | [ |
|
improved cellular and humoral immune responses in broilers | [ | |
|
↑ immune response, egg quality, Haugh unit | [ | |
|
↓ serum glucose, cholesterol, and triglyceride concentration | [ | |
| Selenium |
improved live weight and FCR | [ |
|
improved egg production, egg weight, Haugh unit and eggshell strength in laying hens | [ | |
|
increased of feed intake, body weight and egg production in quails | [ | |
| Sodium Bicarbonate |
improved eggshell quality in laying hens | [ |
| KCL |
improved FCR in broilers | [ |
| Lycopene |
↑ cumulative feed intake and body weight; ↓ FCR in broilers | [ |
|
↑ antioxidant level enzymes (SOD, GSH-Px) and ↓ MDA concentration in broilers | [ | |
|
↑ oxidative status of laying hens, enhanced vitamin levels in the egg; improved egg oxidative stability and yolk color | [ | |
| Resveratrol |
↑ average daily gain, ↓ rectal temperature, ↓ corticosterone, adrenocorticotropin hormone, cholesterol, and malonaldehyde; ↑ triiodothyronine, glutathione, total superoxide dismutase, catalase, and glutathione peroxidase in yellow-feather broilers | [ |
|
improved microbial profile, villus-crypt structure, and expression of the tight junction related genes in broilers | [ | |
|
↑ muscle T-AOC and activity of antioxidant enzymes (catalase, GSH-Px) | [ | |
|
↓ total serum cholesterol and triglycerides, ↓ egg cholesterol content, ↑ antioxidant activity, and ↑ egg sensory scores | [ | |
| Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) |
↑ body weight, feed intake, and level of serum total protein, glucose, and alkaline phosphatase activity in broilers | [ |
|
improved in level of antioxidant enzymes (GSH-Px, SOD, and catalase) in the liver and serum in broilers | [ | |
|
↑ feed intake, egg production, hepatic SOD, catalase, and GSH-Px activity; ↓ hepatic MDA level in quails | [ | |
| Curcumin |
↓ mitochondrial MDA level; ↑ activity of Mn-SOD, GSH-Px, GSST in broilers | [ |
|
↑ gene expression of thioredoxin 2 and peroxiredoxin-3 in broilers improved the laying performance, egg quality, antioxidant enzyme activity, and immune function during heat stress in laying hens | [ | |
| Betaine |
improvement in the feed intake, weight gain, and FCR; lower H/L ratio; improvement in the dressing percentage in broilers | [ |
|
improved digestive function and carcass traits in indigenous yellow-feathered broilers | [ | |
| Taurine |
improved expression of heat shock proteins and body weight in broilers | [ |
|
improved jejunal morphology, ↓ concentrations of serum ghrelin, ↑concentrations of somatostatin and peptide YY in the duodenum; ↑ expression of appetite-related genes | [ |