Effects of Hydrolysed Poultry Byproduct Meal on Metabolic, Inflammatory and Oxidative Parameters in Cats

Hydrolysed proteins are of interest owing to their potential effects on metabolic and physiological responses, low allergenicity and high digestibility. This study aimed to evaluate the use of hydrolysed poultry byproduct meal (HPM) as a replacement for conventional poultry byproduct meal (PBM) as a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of animal physiology and animal nutrition 2024-12
Hauptverfasser: de Ramos, Eloise Cristina, Scarpim, Lucas Bassi, Pescuma, Mariana Gilbert, Goloni, Camila, Pacheco, Letícia Graziele, Theodoro, Stephanie de Souza, Carciofi, Aulus Cavalieri
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hydrolysed proteins are of interest owing to their potential effects on metabolic and physiological responses, low allergenicity and high digestibility. This study aimed to evaluate the use of hydrolysed poultry byproduct meal (HPM) as a replacement for conventional poultry byproduct meal (PBM) as a protein source and to study its effects on serum cytokines, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) activity, serum antioxidant parameters, blood pressure, and urinary parameters in cats. The replacement of PBM with HPM was evaluated using five formulations with similar chemical compositions: control (PBM as the sole protein source) and the inclusion of 5%, 10%, 20%, and 30% HPM (on an as-fed basis). Thirty cats were distributed into two randomised blocks of 15 cats, with 3 cats per diet in each block, totalling 6 cats per food. After 10 days of diet adaptation, the urine of the cats was quantitatively collected from Days 11 to 15, and on the day 21 blood samples were collected and blood pressure was evaluated. Data were subjected to analysis of variance and the means were compared by polynomial contrasts. Non-parametrically distributed variables were compared using the Kruskal-Wallis test (p  0.05). Among the oxidative parameters, there was a quadratic increase in lipid peroxidation and glutathione S-transferase (higher values at 10% HPM) (p 
ISSN:0931-2439
1439-0396
1439-0396
DOI:10.1111/jpn.14088