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Feed Passage Syndrome: An Integrated Approach to Improve Birds Health

Published: February 11, 2020
Summary
INTRODUCTION Production of broilers with high growth rate and feed efficiency through impressive genetic improvement is often directly linked with digestive problems, such as passage of undigested feed (or) feed passage syndrome with impaired gut health function. The passage of undigested feed inside the poultry house is a sporadic problem in integration or individual farms mainly during rainy...
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Authors:
Dr. Bharat Lotan Sadarao
Kemin Industries, Inc
partha pratim adas
Kemin Industries, Inc
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Sayed Mohammad Mortazavi
11 de septiembre de 2020

The issue is very important, so the topic could be useful because explains the causative agents and also the ways for preventing the problem.

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Nelson Ruíz
Nelson Ruíz Nutrition LLC
16 de septiembre de 2020

The following are comments on your interesting paper on rapid feed passage. Just for practical purposes and to make the discussion easier we always define what is rapid feed passage before we talk about it to be sure we are talking about the same issue: "Rapid feed passage is defined here as the condition in which broiler droppings lose their normal shape and consistency, do not display the characteristic white uric acid cover, contain undigested feed that is visible to the naked eye, usually have a yellowish-orange color, are frequently watery and contain sloughed intestinal tissue. Broilers in a flock experiencing a rapid feed passage outbreak have extremely dirty feathers, lack body weight uniformity and display poor pigmentation. As a consequence, the litter becomes wet and slippery, feed conversion is negatively affected, body weights are lower than the desired standard and considerable economic losses may be realized." So, our comments are:

1- It looks like we are talking about the same syndrome you describe in your paper and interestingly, you go back to outbreaks as early as 1996, which I am assuming were in Southeast Asia. Actually, we started to face outbreaks of rapid feed passage in 1998 in the north of South America.

2- Although you refer to rapid feed passage as something sporadic now and then, our experience is that evidently the severity of the outbreaks are less now than at the end of the 1990's and beginning of the 2000's, but the occurrence is not sporadic. It is still occurring in several geographies not only in South America but worldwide. In fact, at a USSEC Seminar in Medellin, Colombia in 2018 which was attended by several of their customers from Mexico to Bolivia over 50% of the audience raised their hand when asked if rapid feed passage was observed in their poultry farms. The fact that the syndrome is better understood today (as I will discuss further down in these comments) makes it less severe because farm managers switch to a different lot of feed immediately.

3- The photos in your paper are very much similar to what we have observed in the field and we have published [Ruiz, N. 2012. Transito rapido tied to soybeans. Feedstuffs, January 30]. Therefore, this is a confirmation that we are talking about the same syndrome. The term "transito rapido" in the title of the Feedstuffs article means "rapid feed passage" in Spanish (and also in Portuguese). For some reason, the Editor of Feedstuffs found it interesting and decided to publish the article using this Spanish term instead of "rapid feed passage" for the audience of Feedstuffs, which presumably is English speaking. Therefore, the impact of the message was quite limited and very few people paid attention to that paper.

4- The title of your paper, however, as well as the contents of Figure 2 ("Factors responsible for feed passage") imply that the rapid feed passage syndrome is multi-factorial. Well, we don't find that exactly to be the case, and here is my explanation which I offer with no other intention than opening the debate because this is one of the purposes of Engormix fora:

A- When we faced very intensive rapid feed passage outbreaks back in 1998, we, of course, have no clue what was the etiology. However, we started to investigate immediately. Between 1998 and 2004 we faced six major outbreaks of the syndrome in broiler integrated farms in Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, and Colombia. However, by mid-2004 and after a considerable investment in tests and analyses for innumerable possible hypotheses and "theories" ranging from 21 different mycotoxins, to 10 biogenic amines, pesticide contamination and other hypotheses, we reached two main conclusions: first, that peculiar lots of soybean meal processed at different origins were involved in the causation of the syndrome, and second, that the content of trypsin inhibitors in those peculiar lots were correlated to rapid feed passage outbreaks in the field. When you say in your paper that "some authors claimed that trypsin inhibitors present in soybean meal were directly linked to feed passage outbreaks" certainly, those authors are us.

B- Because we believed our data were solid enough we presented them at the Annual Meeting of the Poultry Science Association in 2005 [Ruiz and Belalcazar. Field observation: Trypsin inhibitors in soybean meal are correlated with outbreaks of feed passage in broilers. Poultry Science 84(Suppl. 1): 70.] and also at the Annual Convention of the American Veterinary Medicine Association in 2006. The above citation corresponds to the Abstract of the presentation at the Poultry Science Association meeting, but a detailed description and interpretation of the field observations were published in 2012 [Ruiz, N. New insights on the urease activity range for soybean meal: a worldwide opportunity for the poultry industry. 2012 Arkansas Nutrition Conference Proceedings. And also the above referenced paper in Feedstuffs]

C- Your paper makes a good discussion on necrotic enteritis and coccidiosis as connected somehow to rapid feed passage. However, in the outbreaks that we investigated between 1998 and 2004 neither of these two diseases were involved. Rapid feed passage is an independent problem that, however, may co-occur with necrotic enteritis and/or coccidiosis. When the definition described in the first paragraph of these comments is considered, that is, UNDIGESTED FEED WITH OR WITHOUT THE PRESENCE OF INTESTINAL SLOUGHING TISSUE this is absolutely independent of cocci lesions and/or necrotic enteritis.

D- Very frequently (not always) rapid feed passage is accompanied with increased wetness of the droppings, but this is not to say that rapid feed passage is a diarrhea. Actually, as we all know there are many etiologies for situations such as wet droppings, wet litter, diarrhea. However, electrolyte imbalance as when there is excess formulated chloride in the feed has nothing to do with rapid feed passage and it doesn't generate the picture described in the definition. Neither excess sodium nor excess potassium in the feed (or in the drinking water) has anything to do with rapid feed passage.

E- During the over 20 years that we have investigated and observed rapid feed passage in the field, we have not encountered the first event correlated to analyzed mycotoxins. Some mycotoxins such as deoxynivalenol, and fumonisins which are almost normal components of cereal grains at levels well below the toxic levels suggested as maximum allowable per the FDA and EFSA recommendations may, of course, be detected and measured. But outbreaks of rapid feed passage in broiler flocks documented with a specific mycotoxin as the cause, in our experience, remains to be found. Now, avian histopathologists are well trained to correlate tissue damage and toxicants. Mycotoxins are fundamentally toxicants but they are not pathognomonic for chickens, therefore a lesion that under the microscope may appear as related to a specific mycotoxin is then listed in the correspondent report. Avian histopathologists in general are not familiar with trypsin inhibitor lesions, so they don't identify them, and consequently, trypsin inhibitors are not listed in histopathologic reports. We learned this because in our only experience with rapid feed passage in broiler breeders we submitted tens of samples of intestinal tissues to a qualified histopathology lab and the reports where invariant: "a toxicant is present - lesions consistent with mycotoxins". And when I say "tens of samples" is literal because this was an interesting case in the field in which the general manager of the integrated poultry business did not believe and did not accept our diagnosis that broiler breeders were experiencing a severe case of non-specific enteritis (also in the histopathological reports) caused by excess of trypsin inhibitors in the soybean meal formulated in the feed. The company was importing soybean meal per a long-term contract from one single specific oilseed processing plant. Since this situation lasted for over a year, we had a magnificent opportunity to study the effect on broiler breeders of the prolonged exposure to high levels of trypsin inhibitors which we presented at the Annual Meeting of the Poultry Science Association in 2008 [Ruiz, N., E.A. Vargas, and F. de Belalcázar. 2008. Field observation: Effects of long term feeding of soybean meal high in trypsin inhibitors to broiler breeders. Poultry Science 87(Suppl. 1): 30.].

F- The "viral theory" that rapid feed passage is caused by a virus which appears and disappears in the field has been suggested by some colleagues without any further development of the concept. Actually, for some time there has been a confusion thinking that the rapid feed passage syndrome is the same as the runting/stunting and malabsorption syndrome which was first reported in 1977 [Olsen, D.E. 1977. Isolation of a reovirus-like agent from broiler chicks with diarrhea and stunting. Proc. 26th Western Poultry Disease Conference, Davis, California]. No isolation of a virus has been reported in the scientific literature, to the best of my knowledge in relation to rapid feed passage.

G- No academic research has been reported on rapid feed passage and trypsin inhibitors in poultry. However, Schulze in the Netherlands studied the effects of trypsin inhibitors on the digestion of growing swine and demonstrated the endogenous and exogenous nitrogen losses realized by crystalline trypsin inhibitors in a semi-purified diet. The levels of trypsin inhibitors tested in his experiments would be consistent with excess trypsin inhibitors in a commercial soybean meal lot [Schulze, H. 1994. Soybean trypsin inhibitors affect ileal endogenous and exogenous nitrogen flow in pigs. PhD Thesis. Chapter 5. Agricultural University of Wageningen, The Netherlands http://library.wur.nl/WebQuery/wurpubs/25447]. Therefore, in the absence of a similar research with broilers, but in the presence of abundant field and analytical data it is not inappropriate to speculate that the undigested feed feature observed in rapid feed passage is part of the exogenous nitrogen losses, and that the sloughing intestinal tissue is part of the endogenous nitrogen losses. Of course, it is a speculation, remains to be demonstrated. To the best of my knowledge, only the research group led by Dr. Ducatelle at Ghent University has come close to investigate rapid feed passage since they have worked on dysbacteriosis in broilers. It is my opinion that rapid feed passage can be considered also as a form of dysbacteriosis. However, the group at Ghent University have not contemplated soy trypsin inhibitors as part of their research, they have used instead rye as part of their model, an irrelevant ingredient worldwide.

H- Finally, in your long list of factors that may be responsible for rapid feed passage you mention fat rancidity. Yes, I agree with you. Although it is a different toxicant, oxidative rancidity in broilers as a consequence of feeding rancid fat in the feed generates excreta that resemble rapid feed passage. It is not exactly the same, but for practical purposes, we call it rapid feed passage, and consequently, when we are investigating a new case in the field it is necessary to define if the cause is trypsin inhibitors or rancid fat. Those are the only two possible etiologies, so far, that we consider. Below I am sharing photos that illustrate both situations. Rancid fats tend to generate more sloughing intestinal tissue and less undigested feed in the excreta. The opposite seems to occur when trypsin inhibitors are the cause. Nelson Ruiz Nutrition, LLC, Suwanee GA, USA.

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mohammad aslam
19 de septiembre de 2020
Nelson Ruiz you covered each and every aspect, clarified the Obscurity about diarrhea and rapid feed passage syndrome. Regards
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Glenn Alfred S. Ferriol
Hamlet Protein
21 de octubre de 2020
Nelson Ruiz thank You so much for a very comprehensive explanations Dr. Ruiz
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E. Ernest M. Pierson
Silvateam
2 de agosto de 2021
Nelson Ruiz Dr. Ruiz, thank your for your salient and well documented comments. We know that fermented soybeans in the form of tofu are a staple in the diets of people around the world. Do you know of any work which has been done evaluating it’s feeding value in animal diets. In addition to the process potentially impacting TI, it is likely that there would be an effect on the carbohydrates in soybeans. Swine, and perhaps poultry e.g. geese, adult chickens, with their greater hind fermentative capacity are able to extract more energy from soy bean meal than today’s broiler. Dr. Swick of m the University of New South Wales and I discussed this possibility in a conversation we had sometime in the late 20th century or early part of this millennium. Con mis mejores saludos, Ernesto
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Diapk
26 de febrero de 2023
Nelson Ruiz thanks alot .same is the situation in Nepal too
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Dr.channegowda H K
20 de septiembre de 2020
Extracted from an article: I feel this is most probable cause for rapid feed passage syndrome", Please go through Since the 1990s the poultry industry (particularly outside the United States) has faced a syndrome called the "rapid feed passage syndrome", which is correlated with residual trypsin inhibitor content of specific lots of commercial SBM (Ruiz and Belalcázar, 2005). Rapid feed passage ("transito rapido" in both Spanish and Portuguese) is defined as the condition in which broiler droppings lose their normal shape and consistency, do not display the characteristic white uric acid cover, contain undigested feed that is visible to the naked eye, usually have a yellowish-orange color, are frequently watery and contain reddish sloughed intestinal tissue. Broilers in a flock experiencing a rapid feed passage outbreak have dirty feathers, lack body weight uniformity and display poor pigmentation. As a consequence, the litter becomes wet and slippery, foot pad lesions often develop, feed conversion is negatively affected, body weights are lower than the desired standard and considerable economic losses may be realized (Ruiz and Belalcázar, 2005; Ruiz 2012a). This brings a new discussion into the role of residual anti-nutritional factors in SBM, specifically trypsin inhibitors. Because the important question is what is the maximum residual heat-labile anti-nutritional factors in commercial SBM (and other soy products such as full-fat soybeans) that is tolerable to animals. Historically, the issue of "adequacy" was settled at the end of the 1940s with the measurement of an indirect analyte, urease activity (Caskey and Knapp, 1944; Bird et al, 1947) with the range of adequacy established between 0.05-0.20 pH units or delta pH. A urease value above 0.20 indicated SBM was under processed (insufficient heat treatment) although an acceptable delta pH value of 0.30 was also suggested (Hayward, 1975). In contrast, a delta pH value below 0.05 indicated that SBM was likely overcooked. Despite the fact that a high correlation exists between trypsin inhibitors and urease activity in solvent-extracted SBM (Mustakas et al., 1981; Ruiz, 2012b) the actual measurement of residual trypsin inhibitors in the industry does not often occur. In other words, urease activity became "the test". An absolute, when in reality it was just an indirect measurement of heat-labile ant nutritional factors, specifically for trypsin inhibitors. Because rapid feed passage outbreaks may occur in broiler chickens in different geographies with feeds containing 25-30% SBM whose urease activity is well within the range of "adequacy", it becomes imperative to reinterpret the range of adequacy and to connect it to actual measurements of trypsin inhibitors in SBM. Ruiz (2012b) has suggested a new range of adequacy for urease activity of 0.000 - 0.050 delta pH which correlates with approximately 1.65 - 2.35 mg of trypsin inhibitors per gram (3.0-4.0 TIU/mg) of SBM.
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MIGUEL A. CORREA
20 de septiembre de 2020

Dr. Ruiz, I congratulate you for your excellent presentation and clarification regarding the direct relationship, generally forgotten, between rapid transit and antitryptic factors in soy.

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Christoph Hutter
ADDCON
10 de octubre de 2020

Interesting. Can you tell at which age this shows up at most?
As we have such things seen again in the last year. But more brown and bubbling. And it is called till now 21 days illness but what we can say till now we find undigested feed and a cocktail of different bacteria out of range.
But we see that it often starts to show up at day 21 +- 3 days and not much stopped it till we found a combination of things who stops it and the farmers affected have it now under control. We have seen it even with high digestible feed. So would be interesting if yours and what we have seen in Germany and now in Netherland and Spain are the same. As some of the pics look very close.

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Nelson Ruíz
Nelson Ruíz Nutrition LLC
12 de octubre de 2020

Dear Mr. Hutter: Thank you for your comments. Here is in brief my response:

1- Yes indeed, rapid feed passage is observed mostly around 21 days of age and older in broilers depending on the actual concentration of trypsin inhibitors in the feed. Those trypsin inhibitors in the feed are derived either from soybean meal, or full-fat soybeans or both. However, in our experience, in several markets imported yellow corn may arrive contaminated with raw soybeans which ultimately becomes an additional contributor to the total trypsin inhibitor load in the feed.

2- Why at 21 days of age and, in general, not before that age? Because the issue of trypsin inhibitors as any toxicant is dose-related. Please just remember Paracelsus (1493-1541): "It is the dose what makes the poison". Modern broilers are quite efficient, but they cannot reach the body weight gain objectives of Cobb or Ross genetics without a huge feed intake. If the finisher feed contains 25-35% soybean meal, or a mix of soybean meal + full-fat soybeans then it would depend on the level of trypsin inhibitors in the corresponding ingredients to elicit a rapid feed passage outbreak in the field. I discussed in detail this point of feed intake in my paper at the Arkansas Nutrition Conference in 2012 which is available in the Internet.

3- I indicated in my comments that rancid fat is another possible etiology of the syndrome even though is not exactly the same. Therefore, rancidity should be assessed and ruled out as a possible cause. In our experience, however, most rapid feed passage events are soy related including grain contamination with raw soybeans as one of the factors.

4- It is interesting that you mention the observation of rapid feed passage in different European countries and its inconsistency in some cases, that happens very likely due to different qualities of soybean meal from lot to lot, or a similar situation among lots of full-fat soybeans. Part of the solution, of course, resides in precise formulation and its interaction with quality control. NRN, LLC is available for consulting if necessary. Nelson Ruiz, Nelson Ruiz Nutrition, LLC. Suwanee, GA USA.

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Christoph Hutter
ADDCON
12 de octubre de 2020

Dear Mr. Ruiz,

Makes a lot of sense. And I think it looks different with us, as we don't use that high level of Soja anymore. But still we found the last years a lot of trypsin-inhibitors when searching for it in Soyabean. More in local production from small companies but still too from big once. This is why we are working on ways to ferment the raw soyabean with new technologies.
For us, the shape looks different but I think due to the different processing and systems it is very close.
I have no idea how I can upload some pics here otherwise I would have sown you.
We have great success in stopping it if we start around 5 days before in using new kind of acid mixes in the drinking water. As this mix contains new kinds of midd chain fatty acid. They control the formation of negative bacteria and strengthen the walls of the digestion tract. As well as a high load of specific and new developed emulsifiers and as we put AOX inside as well I think it fits 1:1 to your explanation.
Now the last miracrles are clearing off.
Thanks for that.

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dan hofer
15 de octubre de 2020
would hexan used to extract be bad for birds
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Dr Kibiike David
27 de octubre de 2020
I don't have much bout this , my only inquiry where can I get a trypsin inhibitor test chits.
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Nelson Ruíz
Nelson Ruíz Nutrition LLC
28 de octubre de 2020

Two quick responses:

1- Although we have not analyzed residual hexane in lots of commercial soybean meals involved in rapid feed passage in the field, there is not much justification to do that. First, hexane has been the main solvent used in the solvent-extraction process well before the 1990's when rapid feed passage started to be observed worldwide. Second, oilseed processing plants are quite efficient in removing hexane from soybean meal, canola meal, sunflower meal not only for economic reasons but also for safety reasons. To the best of my knowledge, the maximum allowable level of hexane in soybean meal is 500 PPM. Therefore, if this is the maximum, very likely much lower levels would be expected to be found in commercial lots of soybean meal.

2- The wet chemistry for trypsin inhibitors determination is very well defined in the AOCS Methods, AACC Methods as well as in the European ISO Methods. To the best of my knowledge, there are no kits to measure accurately trypsin inhibitors. Several commercial laboratories in and out of the United States offer trypsin inhibitor analysis.

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Christoph Hutter
ADDCON
14 de diciembre de 2020

Nelson Ruiz did you ever see Trial about Fermented soya? This is a trend in piglets here. And as well one company if going the way that you don't need to toast the beans before you ferment it in 2 steps and you can eliminate the most of the unwanted substances without having the Maillard reactions.
In poultry we try it at the moment in organic hens in the Netherlands so was wondering if you have experience with the US available products in these terms.

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Nelson Ruíz
Nelson Ruíz Nutrition LLC
14 de diciembre de 2020

Christoph Hutter. Dear Mr. Hutter, Absolutely, fermented soy bean meal with very low levels of both heat-labile and heat-stable anti-nutritional factors is an alternative to manage soy anti-nutritional factors in general, and in particular to manage rapid feed passage (a form of disbacteriosis in European terms) in broilers. We presented at the virtual Poultry Science Association meeting this year (Ruiz, N., A. Robles-Montes, and J.E. van Eys. 2020. Fermentation of soybean meal results in a net reduction of heat-labile and heat-stable antinutritional factors. 109th Annual Meeting Poultry Science Association, Abstract 206, p.102.) the results for at least six industrial productions of fermented soybean meal (FSBM) versus their unfermented soybean meal (SBM) which were as follows: trypsin inhibitors significantly decreased (P<0.001) from 2.56±0.42 mg/g in SBM (N=8) to 0.97±0.14 mg/g in FSBM (N=6). Sucrose significantly decreased (P<0.001) from 5.91±0.87% in SBM (N=6) to 0.05±0.04% in FSBM (N=26). Raffinose significantly decreased (P<0.001) from 1.28±0.45% in SBM (N=6) to 0.08±0.07% in FSBM (N=26). Stachyose significantly decreased (P<0.001) from 4.86±0.94 (N=6) to 0.13±0.09% in FSBM (N=26). Fermentation also resulted in an important reduction in lectin content and increase in organic acid content most notably lactic acid from non-detectable in SBM to 6.16±0.22% in FSBM (N=13). However, this is a proprietary process being developed in Central America which, of course, is available for export. If you have any interest, please let us know at Nelson Ruiz, Nelson Ruiz Nutrition, LLC, nelsonruiz@nelsonruiznutrition.com, Suwanee, GA, USA

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Hashaam Chaudhry
13 de febrero de 2021

Nelson Ruiz, I hope you will be fine and doing well
I wanna clear that if fermented SBM will be cost-effective for massive production?

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Nelson Ruíz
Nelson Ruíz Nutrition LLC
13 de febrero de 2021
Hashaam Chaudhry. Hello Hashaam, thank you for your participation. Of course not, fermented SBM under current economics is not going to be cost effective for massive production, that is not the purpose of fermented SBM. Fermented SBM is an opportunity to add value to specific fragments of the feed market where it will be justified, and where there will be a return on investment. Let´s say for example piglet pre-starters. Piglets in contrast to baby chicks are quite sensitive to anti-nutritional factors probably due to intake. Therefore, because one the objectives of a piglet pre-starter is a smooth transition to a swine starter feed, fermented SBM very likely is a competitive ingredient in a pre-starter feed because it has the benefits of the nutritional value of soybean meal, but free or almost free of the heat-labile and some of the heat-resistant anti-nutrients. On the other hand, rapid feed passage is rarely observed in broiler chicks during the first and second week. However, at 18 days or 21 days of age when INTAKE starts to creep and depending on the total trypsin inhibitor content of the feed, then rapid feed passage may or may not happen. Fermented SBM may become an expensive alternative to control rapid feed passage in finisher broiler feeds. Certainly, other alternatives such as formulating for a maximum trypsin inhibitor content in the formula or if using full-fat soybeans (FFSB) with near-zero anti-nutritional factors are alternative opportunities. It all depends on what other ingredients are available in a given market and what inclusion levels least-cost formulation yields. Fermented SBM has, in my opinion, a tremendous future in precise nutrition. Nelson Ruiz Nutrition, LLC, Suwanee, GA, USA.
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Alireza Majidi
29 de enero de 2023
Nelson Ruiz Hello I am from Iran In case of heat process of soybean meal you can test urease activity instead of trypsin inhibitor test As you know both of urease and trypsin inhibitors degrade in same temperature ! You can test urease activity ( delta pH ) Urease activity must be under 0.05 If you have greater number, your heat process is not good and trypsin inhibitor is high ! Please search for more information Regards
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Lee Baxter
26 de noviembre de 2020

Very interesting topic and very useful as I have been seeing a very similar pattern at 21 days, one thing that does buck the trend is growth and FCR are not affected. Litter goes from dry and friable to greasy and capped in 24hrs! Once the litter is capped it is unretrievable.

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Christoph Hutter
ADDCON
14 de diciembre de 2020
Lee Baxter we found ways to limit it when it happens to get back to normal. And as well if we have the feeling it will happen what we can do to avoid this.
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Dr Kotaiah Talapaneni
Indbro Research & Breeding Farms
16 de diciembre de 2020

During fermentation, the material gets wet and will require a process to get it dried. This may involve additional costs and concomitant problems of improper drying like fungus contamination will open new areas. Reduction in antinutrients and increasing the nutrient availability is a welcome finding in the study.

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Christoph Hutter
ADDCON
13 de febrero de 2021
Dr.Talapaneni.Kotaiah you can do a solid state fermentation need longer but is very nice and effective. We finished some trials with organic farmers and the outcome is nice. you have 30% dry matter then and the benefit of more moisture can be nice if you cannot trim the peak or such things. fungus can be controlled and can show up in soya even when shiped dry and get wet during transport.
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Alex anichebe
2 de marzo de 2021
Dr.Talapaneni.Kotaiah what best way to SMB not have fungus
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Dr.channegowda H K
18 de febrero de 2021

Dear All,
This is Dr Channegowda from Zeus Biotech India.

As Dr Kotaiah said: we have already tried fermenting soybean meal and results of initial trials are attractive but it is a lengthy process. It takes nearly 24 hours. But totally natural and very safe with no carrier material or filler material.

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Dr. Rama Prasad Chakraborty
28 de julio de 2021
I have gone through the content and it seems to be an old wine in new bottle. Nothing conspicuous has been recommended by the authors instead of depicting all bits to improve gut health apart from Gizzard erosion. It is quite shocking to note that the focussing on fungal infestation in greenish coloured undigested grain could be bit instrumental to precipitate deterioration in gut health and causing wet droppings. The correct measure first to prioritise aflatoxin content of offered feed to strictly below 20ppb in order to ensure that the root cause for same could be spotted to some other causes further step by step. My advice to make a study which is most relevant to key etiology rather than beating about the bush covering multiple reason with developing enough confusion to a farmers to address them prudently. Dr. R.P. Chakraborty
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