Abstract

The effects on newly-hatched turkey poults of feeding diets with varying levels of carbohydrate and of oral gavage with suspensions of corn starch were studied. Feeding lowered hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase activity and raised blood glucose and hepatic glycogen concentrations. In Nicholas strain turkeys, increases of dietary levels of carbohydrate enhanced hepatic glycogen stores without affecting blood glucose concentration or glucose-6-phosphatase activity. Oral gavage of poults with suspensions of corn starch in water raised blood glucose and hepatic glycogen concentrations and lowered glucose-6-phosphatase activity in dose- and time-dependent manners. Changes were noted at 1 hr post-gavage. Oral gavage with starch lowered lactate concentrations in muscle and plasma and lowered plasma concentrations of β-hydroxybutyrate and urate. Plasma concentrations of pyruvate appeared to decline with post-hatch holding without feed. Thus, the apparent effect of starch gavage on plasma pyruvate (high concentration) is dependent upon the length of the holding period for the controls. The data show that poults can alter their metabolism (decrease lipid oxidation and gluconeogenesis and increase carbohydrate stores) almost immediately (1 hr) after oral administration of carbohydrate.

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