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Piglets grow better with combination organic acids and flavours

11-02-2014 | |
Piglets grow better with combination organic acids and flavours
Piglets grow better with combination organic acids and flavours

At the conference ‘Swine Research Days’ (Journées Recherche Porcine), held in February in Paris, France a study was presented that looked at the effect of a microencapsulated combination of organic acids and nature-identical flavours on the growth performance of piglets.

The efficiency of a micro-encapsulated combination of citric acid, sorbic acid, thymol and vanillin (AVIP)* on the growth performance of post-weaning piglets was investigate on the following sets of two studies. A trial was conducted at the VRP Research Centre (Denmark) on 768 piglets (110 blocks with approximately 7 piglets each), divided into 3 treatments: 1) Control (CTR), 2) CTR + 2 kg/T of AVIX (a preliminary formula of the additive AVIP without sorbic acid) and, 3) CTR + 3 kg/T of AVIP.

In the second study, a meta-analysis was performed including four studies from two EU countries (Italy and UK) with a total of 720 pigs. The growth performance of piglets receiving a control or an AVIP diet was studied. In study 1, the ADG was statistically higher in piglets from AVIP and AVIX groups as compared to CTR (5.7%, P<0.05). in contrast, the fcr was better in piglets fed avip (-3 points and -5 points compared to avix and ctr groups, respectively; p><0.05).>

In the meta-analysis (study 2), piglets from the AVIP group showed a significantly higher ADG (+2.9%, P<0.05) and better fcr (-0.08 points, p><0.001) than the ctr. all these studies showed that this additive can increase the growth rate and improve feed efficient in post-weaning piglets.>

*AviPlus®S

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Koeleman
Emmy Koeleman Freelance editor