Liver Haemorrhagic Syndrome in Broilers: Its Effect on Serum Parameters, Antioxidant Capacity, Liver Enzymes and Fatty Acid Profile of Liver
Ismail Yavaş, Shahram Golzar Adabi, Necmettin Ceylan

TL;DR
This study shows that liver haemorrhagic syndrome in broilers worsens with higher scores, causing harmful changes in liver and blood chemistry.
Contribution
The study reveals how increasing LHS scores correlate with deteriorating liver quality and oxidative stress in broilers under commercial rearing.
Findings
Higher LHS scores correlate with increased oxidative stress markers like TBARS and decreased antioxidant levels.
Livers with higher LHS scores show reduced protein and increased fat content, along with altered fatty acid profiles.
Elevated liver enzymes like ALT and AST in higher LHS scores indicate liver damage and dysfunction.
Abstract
This study sought to evaluate the occurrence of various degrees of liver haemorrhagic syndrome (LHS) in broilers subjected to commercial rearing conditions. The objective was to investigate the influence of lesion scores on various biochemical parameters. The prevalence of liver lesions graded from 0 to 5 was 12%, 31%, 33%, 15%, 6% and 3%, respectively. The crude protein content decreased, whereas the crude fat content increased in Scores 4 and 5 (p < 0.05). The observed increase in thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARSs), carbonyl and sulphydryl levels in Score 5 (82.8%, 43.3% and 74.8%, respectively) suggests that this score may be more susceptible to oxidation compared to livers with no LHS incidence (p < 0.01). A reduction in total protein in Scores 4 and 5, a decline in albumin in Score 5, an elevation in uric acid and gamma‐glutamyl transferase (GGT) in Scores 4 and 5 as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Nutrition and Physiology · Rabbits: Nutrition, Reproduction, Health · Liver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment
