Effects of phytogenic feed additive on growth performance, gut health, and antioxidant capacity in broiler chickens challenged with pathogenic Eimeria tenella
Ju Hee Lee, Da-Hye Kim, Viet Anh Vu, Seong Taek Kim, Gyu Bum Choi, Sun Hoo Moon, Han Wool Kim, Jong Pyo Chae, Ju Kyoung Oh, Kyung-Woo Lee

TL;DR
This study shows that a phytogenic feed additive can improve growth and gut health in chickens infected with Eimeria tenella.
Contribution
The study introduces a phytogenic feed additive as a novel solution to reduce avian coccidiosis effects.
Findings
Dietary PT mitigated body weight loss and cecal lesions caused by Eimeria challenge.
PT improved ileal morphology and antioxidant enzyme activity in a concentration-dependent manner.
PT increased glutathione peroxidase levels and reduced nitric oxide concentrations in infected chickens.
Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate a dietary phytogenic preparation (PT) comprising Ginkgo biloba L. leaves and mangosteen extract in broilers challenged with pathogenic Eimeria tenella. One-day-old Arbor Acres broilers (n = 600) were randomly assigned to a treatment group (six replicate floor pens/treatment, 20 chicks/replicate): non-challenged and control diet-fed negative control group (NC); E. tenella challenged and control diet-fed positive control group (PC); and PC + PT (50, 100, or 200 mg PT/kg of diet). On day 14, all groups except NC were gavaged with 1.0 × 10⁴ oocysts of E. tenella. The Eimeria challenge impaired (P < 0.05) body weight, which was mitigated by dietary PT on days 21 and 28. Furthermore, E. tenella challenge increased cecal lesion scores; however, dietary PT preparations reduced (P < 0.001) these lesions. Moreover, Eimeria challenge impaired ileal morphology; however,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoccidia and coccidiosis research · Animal Nutrition and Physiology · Rabbits: Nutrition, Reproduction, Health
