Effects of Dietary 25-Hydroxycholecalciferol Alone or in Combination with Vitamin D3 on Growth Performance, Blood Vitamin D Status, Immune Response, Bone Integrity, and Antioxidant Capacity of Nursery Pigs
Chan Ho Kwon, Eva S. Safaie, Jannell A. Torres, Zhaohui Yang, Xi Chen, Pengcheng Xue, Young Dal Jang

TL;DR
This study found that adding 25-hydroxycholecalciferol to pig diets improved vitamin D levels and reduced oxidative stress in young pigs.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that 25-hydroxycholecalciferol improves vitamin D status and reduces oxidative stress in nursery pigs compared to vitamin D3.
Findings
Pigs fed 25-hydroxycholecalciferol had higher plasma vitamin D levels and lower oxidative stress.
Feed intake was higher in pigs receiving 25-hydroxycholecalciferol compared to vitamin D3 alone.
Bone integrity and immune parameters were not affected by 25-hydroxycholecalciferol supplementation.
Abstract
Vitamin D is commonly added to nursery pig diets, and 25-hydroxycholecalciferol (25-OHD3) is a form that is more bioavailable than vitamin D3 (VD3). In this study, we evaluated the effects of replacing VD3 with 25-OHD3 in diets for nursery pigs on growth, vitamin D status, bone integrity, and antioxidant capacity. Pigs fed diets containing 25-OHD3, either alone or combined with VD3, consumed more feed than those fed VD3 alone. In addition, higher circulating vitamin D levels and lower oxidative stress were observed in pigs fed diets supplemented with 25-OHD3, suggesting improved health status after weaning. However, immune measurements and bone integrity were not affected by the supplementation of 25-OHD3. Overall, supplementing 25-OHD3 in nursery diets enhanced vitamin D status and helped alleviate postweaning oxidative stress. This study evaluated the effects of dietary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVitamin D Research Studies · Animal Nutrition and Physiology · Vitamin K Research Studies
