Abstract

There is increasing pressure to reduce the prophylactic and therapeutic use of antibiotics in animal production based on the fear for inducing bacterial resistance. Antibiotics are very cost effective promoters of growth and health in production animals. Therefore, farmers would only be willing to reduce antibiotics if effective alternatives are available. The search for alternatives is hampered by misconceptions about the exact physiological mechanisms behind growth promotion by antibiotic growth promoters (AGP). Hitherto, they were attributed to their antibiotic properties. This is highly unlikely for various reasons, the main one being the subtherapeutic concentrations used. AGP work much more likely by direct inhibition of the intestinal postprandial inflammatory response. This implies that alternatives to antimicrobial growth promoters should be non-antibiotic anti-inflammatory compounds, which also removes the fear for inducing bacterial resistance. Because of public resistance against the perceived...

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