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Relationship between food consumption and energy and nitrogen utilisation by chicks given varying amounts of standard and leucine-, isoleucine- and valine-deficient diets.
Br Poult Sci. 1985 Oct; 26(4):519-25.BP

Abstract

The effect of different amounts of food, varying from below to above the rate of voluntary intake, was studied in chicks using a standard diet and diets containing only half the recommendation concentrations of leucine, isoleucine or valine. Irrespective of diet the body weight gain of the chicks increased with increasing food consumption. The body weight gain of chicks given the leucine-deficient diet was similar to that of chicks given the same amount of the standard diet. In contrast, the body weight gains of chicks given either the valine- or isoleucine-deficient diet were significantly less than that of chicks given the same amount of the standard diet. When the food intakes of the birds were similar the differences in body protein and water contents of the birds fed the different diets reflected differences in body weight gains, whereas body fat content was affected in the reverse manner. Retention and retention rate of dietary energy increased as food consumption increased. This was particularly evident in chicks given the isoleucine-deficient diet, followed by those given the valine-, leucine-deficient and standard diets. For all diets, the amounts of nitrogen retained and nitrogen retention rate (N retained/N consumed) increased in line with body weight gain. The metabolisable energy values of the diets were similar, except for the isoleucine-deficient diet which had a significantly higher metabolisable energy value than the standard valine-deficient diets.

Authors

No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

4075194

Citation

Okumura, J, et al. "Relationship Between Food Consumption and Energy and Nitrogen Utilisation By Chicks Given Varying Amounts of Standard and Leucine-, Isoleucine- and Valine-deficient Diets." British Poultry Science, vol. 26, no. 4, 1985, pp. 519-25.
Okumura J, Mori S, Muramatsu T. Relationship between food consumption and energy and nitrogen utilisation by chicks given varying amounts of standard and leucine-, isoleucine- and valine-deficient diets. Br Poult Sci. 1985;26(4):519-25.
Okumura, J., Mori, S., & Muramatsu, T. (1985). Relationship between food consumption and energy and nitrogen utilisation by chicks given varying amounts of standard and leucine-, isoleucine- and valine-deficient diets. British Poultry Science, 26(4), 519-25.
Okumura J, Mori S, Muramatsu T. Relationship Between Food Consumption and Energy and Nitrogen Utilisation By Chicks Given Varying Amounts of Standard and Leucine-, Isoleucine- and Valine-deficient Diets. Br Poult Sci. 1985;26(4):519-25. PubMed PMID: 4075194.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Relationship between food consumption and energy and nitrogen utilisation by chicks given varying amounts of standard and leucine-, isoleucine- and valine-deficient diets. AU - Okumura,J, AU - Mori,S, AU - Muramatsu,T, PY - 1985/10/1/pubmed PY - 1985/10/1/medline PY - 1985/10/1/entrez SP - 519 EP - 25 JF - British poultry science JO - Br Poult Sci VL - 26 IS - 4 N2 - The effect of different amounts of food, varying from below to above the rate of voluntary intake, was studied in chicks using a standard diet and diets containing only half the recommendation concentrations of leucine, isoleucine or valine. Irrespective of diet the body weight gain of the chicks increased with increasing food consumption. The body weight gain of chicks given the leucine-deficient diet was similar to that of chicks given the same amount of the standard diet. In contrast, the body weight gains of chicks given either the valine- or isoleucine-deficient diet were significantly less than that of chicks given the same amount of the standard diet. When the food intakes of the birds were similar the differences in body protein and water contents of the birds fed the different diets reflected differences in body weight gains, whereas body fat content was affected in the reverse manner. Retention and retention rate of dietary energy increased as food consumption increased. This was particularly evident in chicks given the isoleucine-deficient diet, followed by those given the valine-, leucine-deficient and standard diets. For all diets, the amounts of nitrogen retained and nitrogen retention rate (N retained/N consumed) increased in line with body weight gain. The metabolisable energy values of the diets were similar, except for the isoleucine-deficient diet which had a significantly higher metabolisable energy value than the standard valine-deficient diets. SN - 0007-1668 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/4075194/Relationship_between_food_consumption_and_energy_and_nitrogen_utilisation_by_chicks_given_varying_amounts_of_standard_and_leucine__isoleucine__and_valine_deficient_diets_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -
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