Abstract

Thirty-eight gestating sows were either immunized against somatostatin (SRIF) and/or injected with growth hormone-releasing factor (GRF). Treatment effects on carcass composition and resistance of newborn piglets to a 60-hour fast were investigated. Protein content of carcasses at birth was increased in piglets of sows receiving GRF or immunized against SRIF, however, when sows received both treatments there was a reduction in carcass protein content (p = 0.01). Other carcass components were unaltered by treatments, and none of the treatments affected metabolic or endocrine profiles of piglets at birth. Concentrations of GH, IGF-I (p less than 0.01), glucagon and cortisol (p less than 0.05) increased linearly with duration of fast, whereas glucose values decreased. Resistance to fasting was unaltered in piglets from any treatment thereby suggesting that exogenous GRF and/or SRIF immunization of sows during gestation are unlikely to improve survival of newborn piglets.

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