scholarly journals The vitamin B6 status of pigs given a diet containing linseed meal

1977 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. N. Bishara ◽  
H. F. Walker

1. Pigs consuming a diet containing 300 g linseed meal/kg and a pyridoxine supplement showed greater growth, nitrogen retention, blood packed cell volume and haemoglobin than those receiving only the basal diet.2. Tryptophan-load tests on unsupplemented pigs revealed an increased excretion of kynurenine, Nα-acetylkynurenine and xanthurenic acid compared to those receiving additional pyridoxine.3. The results suggest that the unsupplemented pigs were marginally deficient in vitamin B6.4. When the same diet was fed to rats there was no evidence of vitamin B6 deficiency.

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-103
Author(s):  
S. M. Tanjil Shah ◽  
Md. Tanvir Islam ◽  
Rakiba Zabin ◽  
Pravas Chandra Roy ◽  
Nigar Sultana Meghla ◽  
...  

Background and Aim: The use of antibiotic growth promoters (AGPs) in the poultry industry has raised concern because of their potential harm to human health. Emerging evidence suggests that probiotics are a safer substitute, although little research has explored this in Bangladesh. We recently isolated local bacterial strains with probiotic properties. We aimed to determine their impact on the growth, hematobiochemical parameters, and production costs of broiler chicks relative to that of a commercial probiotic (CP) and AGP. Materials and Methods: Day-old male broiler chicks (Cobb 500, n=63) were divided equally into three experimental groups (three replicates per group and seven chicks per replicate). First group was fed a basal diet supplemented with the AGP, ciprofloxacin (CTL group), second group was fed a basal diet supplemented with the CP, Protexin® (CP group), and the third group was fed a basal diet supplemented with our isolated bacterial strains (study probiotic [SP] group) for 36 days. Body weight was recorded daily, and relative growth rate (RGR), feed conversion ratio (FCR), and organ weights and carcass yields were calculated at the study's end. Blood obtained on day 36 was used to determine the number of red blood cell (RBC) and white blood cells (WBCs), hemoglobin (Hb) concentration, packed cell volume, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, as well as levels of serum glucose, total and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, and triglycerides (TGs). Total production costs were estimated by summing the variable and fixed costs. Results: Chicks in both the CP and SP groups experienced significant decreases in blood glucose levels and significant increases in BW, RGR, FCR, levels of RBC and WBC, Hb concentration, and packed cell volume compared with those in the CTL group (p<0.05 for all). Our data suggested a numerical reduction (p>0.05) in levels of total cholesterol, TGs, and HDL in the SP and CP groups when compared to the CTL group. In addition, both CP and SP treatments resulted in significant (p<0.05) gains in net profit compared with the treatment given to the CTL group. Conclusion: Administration of probiotics, either from a commercialized or local source, led to greater improvements in growth, hematological parameters, and net profits of broiler chicks when compared with that of an AGP. This suggests that they are suitable alternatives to the AGPs used in poultry feed and that our isolated strains, in particular, are an ideal option for farmers in Bangladesh.


1990 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. Bender ◽  
Eliud N. M. Njagi ◽  
Paul S. Danielian

Vitamin B6 deficiency was induced in mice by maintenance for 4 weeks on a vitamin B6-free diet. Tryptophan metabolism was assessed by determining the urinary excretion of tryptophan metabolites, the metabolism of [14C]tryptophan in vivo and the formation of tryptophan and niacin metabolites by isolated hepatocytes. The vitamin B6-deficient animals excreted more xanthurenic acid and 3-hydroxykynurenine, and less of the niacin metabolites N1-methyl nicotinamide and methyl-2-pyridone-4-carboxamide, than did control animals maintained on the same diet supplemented with 5 mg vitamin B6/kg. After intraperitoneal injection of [14C]tryptophan, vitamin B6-deficient mice showed lower liberation of14CO2 from [methylene-14C]tryptophan and [U-14C]tryptophan than did controls, indicating impairment of kynureninase (EC 3.7.1.3) activity. There was no difference between the two groups of animals in the metabolism of [ring-2-14C]tryptophan. Hepatocytes isolated from the vitamin B6-deficient animals formed more 3-hydroxykynurenine and xanthurenic acid than did cells from control animals, but also formed more NADP and free niacin.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. IJTR.S24412
Author(s):  
Katsumi Shibata ◽  
Junko Hirose ◽  
Tsutomu Fukuwatari

Tryptophan metabolism is directly involved with B-group vitamins such as vitamin B2, niacin, and vitamin B6, and indirectly with vitamin B1 and pantothenic acid. We evaluated the validity of requirements of B-group vitamins set by the Dietary Reference Intakes for the Japanese (DRI-J). We investigated the fate of dietary tryptophan in 10 Japanese adult men who ate the same diet based on DRI-J during a 4-week study. Vitamin mixtures were administered based on the amounts in the basal diet during weeks 2, 3, and 4. Daily urine samples were collected eight times (days 1 and 5 in each week). Administration of vitamin mixtures had no effect on tryptophan metabolites such as anthranilic acid, kynurenic acid, xanthurenic acid, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid, and quinolinic acid within individuals. Surplus administration of B-group vitamins against DRI-J requirements did not elicit beneficial effects on tryptophan metabolism. Our findings supported the requirements of B-group vitamins set by the DRI-J.


Blood ◽  
1961 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 547-561 ◽  
Author(s):  
LUIS SANCHEZ MEDAL ◽  
JORGE ELIZONDO ◽  
JESUS TORRES GALLARDO ◽  
CARLOS GITTLER

Abstract The clinical and laboratory findings in two brothers with severe anemia are presented. These findings were very similar in both cases. Evidence that at least one of them suffered from a pyridoxine-responsive anemia is presented. It was assumed that the other had the same disorder since, in addition to the striking similarity in the clinical and laboratory abnormalities, the latter’s anemia disappeared completely with the parenteral administration of vitamin B complex, which provided him with 2 mg. of pyridoxine daily. These patients have not relapsed 1.5 and 6 years after stopping the therapy. A review of the reported cases with anemia responding to vitamin B6 administration is presented. Common factors observed in some of these cases are: (1) severe anemia, microcytic and hypochromic in type, chiefly due to a striking maturation erythroblastic arrest at the basophilic stage with no defect in leukocytes or thrombocytes; (2) hyperferremia and hemosiderosis; (3) an abnormal tryptophan-loading test; and (4) complete or almost complete correction of all abnormalities with administration of vitamin B6, even at small doses. These data were considered to suggest that the patients had a true deficiency in pyridoxine. In other patients, no increased excretion of xanthurenic acid has been observed after a tryptophan-loading dose, and pyridoxine administration has improved the anemia only partially and has not reversed the serum iron parameters to normality. All of these other patients suffered from a familial hypochromic anemia not due to iron deficiency or from a "sidero-achrestic" or "refractory normoblastic" anemia. The cause of the disorder in patients in the first group is unknown, but, by exclusion, increased requirement of vitamin B6 seems to be the most likely possibility.


1970 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
MSH Khan ◽  
M Mostofa ◽  
MS Jahan ◽  
MA Sayed ◽  
MA Hossain

The experiment was performed on 25 adult mice, (Swiss albino), weighing about 25 gm, maintained on standard pellet diet and drinking water ad libitum. All the mice were randomly divided into five equal groups (5x5). Each group comprised of five mice was marked as group A, B, C, D and E. In the present study an attempt has been taken to study the effect of Garlic and vitamin B-complex in lead induced toxicities in mice with the observation of some parameters as toxic signs and body weight, some haematological parameters like total erythrocyte count (TEC), total leukocyte count (TLC), haemoglobin content (Hb%) and Packed cell volume (PCV), some biochemical parameters such as serum glutamate pyruvate transaminase SGPT/ALT, Serum glutamate Oxaloacetate transaminase (SGOT/AST) and postmortem changes in mice. An attempt was also made to estimate the residual deposition of lead in body tissues i.e. blood, liver, kidney, brain and bone in mice. Mice treated with lead acetate showed severe toxic signs and significantly reduced total erythrocyte count, total leukocyte count, haemoglobin content and packed cell volume and significant elevation of SGPT and SGOT. But in case of mice treated by lead acetate along with Garlic and vitamin B-complex showed almost normal levels of haematological and biochemical parameters. From this experiment it is revealed that Garlic and vitamin B-complex has protective and curative effect in lead toxicity. The mean body weight of mice of group B (only lead acetate) was significantly (p < 0.01) decreased, in comparison with the other treated groups. Lead acetate group also significantly reduced (p < 0.01) total erythrocyte count, packed cell volume and hemoglobin content was on 42 days of treatment. SGPT and SGOT were significantly elevated in all treated groups in comparison with control group. The liver of the mice of group B were blackish discoloration and enlarged. The significant reduction of lead in blood, liver and kidney was found in group E < C< D in comparison to group B (lead treated). The order of effectiveness was Garlic + Vitamin B- complex > Garlic > Vitamin Bcomplex. Key words: Garlic, vitamin B-complex, lead acetate, mice   doi: 10.3329/bjvm.v6i2.2337 Bangl. J. Vet. Med. (2008). 6 (2): 203-210


1976 ◽  
Vol 33 (8) ◽  
pp. 1791-1793 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. A. Poston

Triplicate lots of fingerling lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) (initial mean weight, 5.3 g) were fed a basal, semipurified diet, or this basal diet supplemented with either 1.0 or 2.0 ppm of either menadione sodium bisulfite (MSB) or menadione dimethylpyrimidinol bisulfite (MPB) for 18 wk at 14 C. Neither form of vitamin K had a significant effect on the growth, food conversion, or body composition of the fish.Fish fed 1 ppm of MSB had a significantly higher mean packed cell volume (PCV) than those fed 2 ppm of either analogue. Trout fed 2 ppm of MPB had an intermediate PCV which was not significantly different from that of trout fed either 1 ppm MPB or 2 ppm MSB. A dietary level of 1 ppm MPB (providing an equivalent menaquinone concentration of about 0.5 mg/kg of diet) is sufficient to insure normal coagulation of lake trout blood and a satisfactory PCV.


1969 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 705-707
Author(s):  
M. C. Nath ◽  
N. V. Shastri

1. Experiments were undertaken to study the effect of daily intraperitoneal injection of acetoacetate for 90 days on vitamin B6 status in male albino rats. The initial dose of acetoacetate was 50 mg per kg body-weight, which was increased by 50 mg per kg body-weight every 15 days.2. Urinary excretion of vitamin B6 was found to decrease after 30 days in acetoacetatetreated rats. After 75 days urinary values of vitamin B6 were considerably lower in such rats than in the corresponding control rats.3. When acetoacetate injections were stopped after 90 days and the rats were fed L-tryptophan (100mg per rat), they were found to excrete significantly greater amounts of urinary kynurenine, hydroxykynurenine and xanthurenic acid than the corresponding controls.4. Blood and liver vitamin Be levels were found to be lower in rats treated with acetoacetate for 90 days than in the untreated rats.


1965 ◽  
Vol 43 (4) ◽  
pp. 579-589 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. C. Cheney ◽  
D. M. Curry ◽  
G. H. Beaton

The lowering of blood glutamic–oxaloacetic (GOT) and glutamic–pyruvic (GPT) transaminase activities was found to be specific for vitamin B6 deprivation among several B vitamins tested and in the presence of a simultaneous restriction of eight B vitamins, cortisone administration, or variation of dietary protein level. It was found that changes in blood transaminase activity did not always parallel those seen in liver transaminase activity. In the determination of vitamin B6 nutritional status, blood GPT activity appeared to be more sensitive than GOT activity and would seem to be as sensitive an indicator as xanthurenic acid excretion after a tryptophan load.


1939 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 185-192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul György ◽  
Harry Goldblatt

In forty-eight rats kept on a basal diet deficient in the vitamin B complex and supplemented with vitamin B1 and riboflavin or with vitamin B1, riboflavin and vitamin B6, various pathological changes in the liver were observed. These changes were characterized mainly by parenchymatous and fatty degeneration, focal and massive necrosis, hyperemia and hernorrhage and, in some of the rats, by perilobular and condensation fibrosis. Addition of yeast or Peters' eluate (yeast extract) regularly prevented this hepatic injury. On the basis of the evidence obtained, it is assumed that the liver changes are of nutritional origin and should be correlated to deficiency of a part of the vitamin B2 complex.


1989 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fumio TAKEUCHI ◽  
Ryoko TSUBOUCHI ◽  
Sukehisa IZUTA ◽  
Yukio SHIBATA

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