Accuracy of predicting chemical body composition of growing pigs using dual X-ray absorptiometry

被引:18
作者
Kasper, C. [1 ,2 ]
Schlegel, P. [1 ]
Ruiz-Ascacibar, I. [1 ,3 ]
Stoll, P. [1 ]
Bee, G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Agroscope, Swine Res Unit, Tioleyre 4, CH-1725 Posieux, Switzerland
[2] Agroscope, Anim Genophen Grp, Tioleyre 4, CH-1725 Posieux, Switzerland
[3] Yara Iberian SAU, Infanta Mercedes St, E-28020 Madrid, Spain
关键词
Bone mineral content; Calibration; Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; Imaging techniques; Swine; CARCASS COMPOSITION; COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY; EMPTY BODY; ENERGY; DXA; DEVICES; FAT; DEPOSITION; ULTRASOUND; DYNAMICS;
D O I
10.1016/j.animal.2021.100307
中图分类号
S8 [畜牧、 动物医学、狩猎、蚕、蜂];
学科分类号
0905 ;
摘要
Studies in animal science assessing nutrient and energy efficiency or determining nutrient requirements benefit from gathering exact measurements of body composition or body nutrient contents. Those are acquired by standardized dissection or by grinding the body followed by wet chemical analysis, respectively. The two methods do not result in the same type of information, but both are destructive. Harnessing human medical imaging techniques for animal science can enable repeated measurements of individuals over time and reduce the number of individuals required for research. Among imaging techniques, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) is particularly promising. However, the measurements obtained with DXA do not perfectly match dissections or chemical analyses, requiring the adjustment of the DXA via calibration equations. Several calibration regressions have been published, but comparative studies of those regression equations and whether they are applicable to different data sets are pending. Thus, it is currently not clear whether existing regression equations can be directly used to convert DXA measurements into chemical values or whether each individual DXA device will require its own calibration. Our study builds prediction equations that relate body composition to the content of single nutrients in growing entire male pigs (BW range 20-100 kg) as determined by both DXA and chemical analyses, with R2 ranging between 0.89 for ash and 0.99 for water and CP. Moreover, we show that the chemical composition of the empty body can be satisfactorily determined by DXA scans of carcasses, with the prediction error ranging between 4.3% for CP and 12.6% for ash. Finally, we compare existing prediction equations for pigs of a similar range of BWs with the equations derived from our DXA measurements and evaluate their fit with our chemical analysis data. We found that existing equations for absolute contents that were built using the same DXA beam technology predicted our data more precisely than equations based on different technologies and percentages of fat and lean mass. This indicates that the creation of generic regression equations that yield reliable estimates of body composition in pigs of different growth stages, sexes and genetic breeds could be achievable in the near future. DXA may be a promising tool for high-throughput phenotyping for genetic studies, because it efficiently measures body composition in a large number and wide array of animals. (c) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of The Animal Consortium. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]   Comparison of three methods for the in vivo estimation of body composition in dairy ewes [J].
Bocquier, F ;
Guillouet, P ;
Barillet, F ;
Chilliard, Y .
ANNALES DE ZOOTECHNIE, 1999, 48 (04) :297-308
[2]   In Vivo Precision of the GE iDXA for the Assessment of Total Body Composition and Fat Distribution in Severely Obese Patients [J].
Carver, Tamara E. ;
Christou, Nicholas V. ;
Andersen, Ross E. .
OBESITY, 2013, 21 (07) :1367-1369
[3]  
Crenshaw T.D., 2001, Swine Nutrition, V2nd, P187
[4]   Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry and body composition: Differences between devices and comparison with reference methods [J].
Genton, L ;
Hans, D ;
Kyle, UG ;
Pichard, C .
NUTRITION, 2002, 18 (01) :66-70
[5]   Comparison of body weight and composition measured by two different dual energy X-ray absorptiometry devices and three acquisition modes in obese women [J].
Genton, Laurence ;
Karsegard, Veronique L. ;
Zawadynski, Sophie ;
Kyle, Ursula G. ;
Pichard, Claude ;
Golay, Alain ;
Hans, Didier B. .
CLINICAL NUTRITION, 2006, 25 (03) :428-437
[6]   Dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) can be used to predict live animal and whole carcass composition of sheep [J].
Hunter, T. E. ;
Suster, D. ;
Dunshea, F. R. ;
Cummins, L. J. ;
Egan, A. R. ;
Leury, B. J. .
SMALL RUMINANT RESEARCH, 2011, 100 (2-3) :143-152
[7]  
Kasper C., 2020, ZENODO, DOI [10.5281/zenodo.3981182, DOI 10.5281/ZENODO.3981182]
[8]   Calibration of dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry estimating pig body composition [J].
Kipper, M. ;
Marcoux, M. ;
Andretta, I ;
Pomar, C. .
ENERGY AND PROTEIN METABOLISM AND NUTRITION, 2019, 138 :427-429
[9]   Assessing the accuracy of measurements obtained by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry on pig carcasses and primal cuts [J].
Kipper, M. ;
Marcoux, M. ;
Andretta, I. ;
Pomar, C. .
MEAT SCIENCE, 2019, 148 :79-87
[10]  
Kuhn Max, 2023, CRAN