Title: Feed Additives
1Feed Additives
- Pages 319 325 (Chapter 6)
2Why use them?
- Cause a desired response/benefit
- Alter metabolism
- affect growth
- change pH
- manipulate microflora
- improve digestion
- increase yield
- Reduce acidosis
- Improve immune response
- Increase palatability
- Reduce fecal odor
- Reduce joint pain
3Major Classes
- Growth Promotion and Feed Efficiency
- Antibiotics
- Medicinal Uses
- Coccidiostats, worming agents
- Others
- Buffers and Neutralizers
- Antioxidants
- Preservatives
- Binders
- Direct Fed Microbials
- Coloring Agents
- Flavorings
- Hormonelike products
- Feed Additives
- Implants
4Examples
- Antibiotics disease prevention
- Coccidiostats control parasites
- Xanthophyll makes egg yolks yellow
- Cantaxanthin
- Hormones (hormone like) increases growth
- Yeast, Fungi, Direct fed microbials
- Buffers HCO3 etc.. Prevent rumen acidosis
- Antioxidants prevents feed from getting rancid
- Pellet Binders keeps feed in pellet form
- Flavoring Agents makes feed taste better
- Surfactants lipid digestion, increase milk
production, yield - Anionic salts acidify diet to increase Ca
absorption
5FEED ADDITIVES
- Use of feed additives is strictly regulated in
the developed countries, and many others, to
ensure - Human food safety
- Animal safety
- Additive efficacy
- Minimal environmental impact
- Dramatic increase in globalization of
marketingof animal products has led to more
uniformity in regulations among countries. - Animal products must comply with the laws ofthe
countries to which they are being sold.
6FEED ADDITIVES
- AAFCO (Association of American Feed Control
Officials) provides the U.S. mechanism for
developing and implementing uniform equitable
laws, regulations, standards, and enforcement
policies. - Regulating manufacture, distribution, and sale
ofsafe and effective animal feeds.
- AAFCO defines a feed additive as
- "an ingredient or combination of ingredients
addedto the basic feed mix to fulfill a
specific need." - " usually used in micro quantities and
requirescareful handling and mixing"
7FEED ADDITIVES
- Animal products are routinely tested to ensure
that feed additives are being used correctly. - Use of feed additives has been beneficial to
livestock producers under our modern methods of
production. - Feed additives have been used extensively in the
U.S. and many other countries since the discovery
commercial production of antibiotics and sulfa
drugs in the late 1940s. - Development of intense production systems made
possible because of additives that could control
disease/parasites. - The European Union recently banned feeding of
antibiotics to animals meant for human
consumption.
8Growth Promotion and Feed Efficiency
- Antibiotics
- Substance produced by a living organism that has
bacteriostatic or bactericidal properties. - Fed to reduce incidence of subclinical levels of
infections in the GI or respiratory tracts. - Increase rate of gain and feed efficiency.
- Chemotherapeutic Agents
- Inorganic or organic compound that inhibits the
growth of target organisms (not produced by
living organism).
9ADDITIVES CLASSED AS DRUGS
- In the U.S., use regulation of additives
classed as drugs is controlled by the Center for
Veterinary Medicine, within the FDA. - To determine that drugs medicated feed are
properly labeled for intended use and that animal
feeds and food derived from animals are safe to
eat. - What is the human risk?
- Federal law states no animal drug can be usedin
feed until adequate research submitted to the FDA
proves the drug is both safe and effective. - In developing a new drug for use with animals,
manufacturers must go through extensive testing.
10ADDITIVES CLASSED AS DRUGS Antibiotics
- Antibiotics are compounds produced by
microorganisms. - inhibit growth/metabolism of some (not all) other
microorganisms. - In some instances, they may be toxic to
warm-blooded animals. - Most antibiotic names end in -cin or -mycin.
- All antibiotics used commercially for growth
promotion are produced by fermentation processes
using fungi or bacteria.
11Growth Promotion Feed Efficiency Antibiotics
- Antibiotics are effective at improving production
when fed at low levels to young, growing animals.
12Growth Promotion Feed Efficiency Antibiotics
- Feed Efficiency Improvement
- Growth is nearly always increased, particularly
with animals exposed to adverse environmental
conditions. - Feed intake usually decreases in ruminants.
- Varies by animal species.
- Antibiotic-fed animals are less apt to go off
feed. - Can control a wide variety of diseases.
- As a rule, reduce the incidence or severity of
several types of diarrhea
13Growth Promotion Feed Efficiency Antibiotics
- Some are approved at low levels of continuous use
for reducing the incidence of - Enterotoxemia (overeating disease) in lambs.
- Liver abscesses in fattening cattle.
- Diarrhea in young mammals deprived of colostrum.
- In poultry, some claims include
- Reduction in respiratory disease.
- Nonspecific enteritis (blue comb) infectious
sinusitis. - Improved egg production and hatchability.
14Growth Promotion Feed Efficiency Antibiotics
- Two antibiotics for use in cattle, monensin and
lasalocid, are unusual in that they give a good
response in both growing and mature animals. - Approval was first received for use as
coccidiostats with poultry. - Both of these antibiotics are quite toxic to
horses.
15Growth Promotion Feed Efficiency Antibiotics
- Obtaining approval for new feed additive drugs
has become more difficult in recent years. - More investigative effort expense are involved.
- Few recent approvals.
- Very few antibiotic additives are approved for
horses, rabbits, sheep, goats, ducks, pheasants
quail. - NONE for geese, dogs, cats, exotics.
- The primary reason is the cost of obtaining
approval in relation to potential sales volumes.
16Growth Promotion Feed Efficiency Antibiotics
- In poultry very typical to see more than one
included. - Most can be used for layers, except high
levelsof chlortetracycline and erythromycin. - Manufacturer approval must be obtained forusing
different combinations of antibiotics. - Or combinations of antibiotics other controlled
drugs. - Far more drug combinations have been approved for
chickens turkeys than all other animals
combined. - It is illegal to feed antibiotics at different
levels or in different combinations from those
previously approved.
17Growth Promotion Feed Efficiency
Chemotherapeutic Agents
- Arsenicals are all synthetic compounds
(chemotherapeutic agent) include a number of
drugs used in turkey, chicken, and swine rations. - Control of parasites.
- Some stimulate growth in the same manner as
antibiotics. - The effect can be additive to antibiotic
stimulation. - Several arsenicals have claims of improved growth
production as well as improved feed efficiency
for chickens, turkeys, or swine. - And control of Blackhead in poultry diarrhea in
swine.
18Growth Promotion Feed Efficiency
Chemotherapeutic Agents
- Arsenicals have the disadvantage that they may
accumulate in body tissues, particularly the
liver. - At the levels fed, they are not considered toxic.
- All have a minimum 5-day withdrawal period before
animals are to be slaughtered for human food. - Large public concern arsenic in my food
19Medicinal Uses of Additives
- Prevention or treatment
- Coccidiostats (poultry)
- Histostats
- Histomoniasis (Blackhead) protozoan disease
affecting turkeys and some other poultry. Affects
the liver and cecum. - G.I enteritis, diarrhea, dysentery
- Anthelmintic (worming) agents
20Medicinal Uses Coccidiostats
- Coccidia are microscopic parasites.
- Coccidiostats include a wide variety of
compounds, ranging from a number of synthetic
drugs to antibiotics. - Coccidiosis outbreaks are very large concern in
confinement poultry operations. - Evidence suggests coccidiosis is becoming a
greater problem with sheep cattle in close
confinement.
21Medicinal Uses Nitrofurans
- Synthetic antibiotic
- The nitrofurans are antibacterial compounds and
are effective against a relatively large number
of microbial diseases. - Continued use of nitrofurans has not yet
developed bacterial resistance, as is the case
for some antibiotics.
22Medicinal Uses Sulfas
- Reduction in use
- Problems with tissue residues
- Most of problems alleviated by sulfas can be
managed with other additives.
23Hormone-Like Additives
- Hormones are substances produced by the endocrine
organs to activate other organs. Synthesized
compounds that produce the same responses as
natural hormones can be used to - Promote milk production
- Promote animal growth
- Fed as an additive or implanted
24Hormone-Like Additives
- Melengestrol acetate (MGA) is the only
hormone-like production improver remaining on the
approved list. - Extensively used with beef heifers
- Suppress estrus which results in more efficient
and more rapid gain.
25Hormone-Like Implants Pages 322-323
- Although not feed additives, several productsare
available for use as subcutaneous implants. - Hexestrol, (outside the U.S.)
- Ralgro Anabolic agent, improves feed
efficiency. - Synovex a combination of estrogen
progesterone. - Rapid Gain a combination of testosterone
estrogen - Steer-oid a combination of progesterone and
estradiol. - A high percentage of growing- finishing cattle
and sheep are treated with one or more of these
implants.
26Hormone-Like Additives
- In ruminants, natural or synthetic hormones
produce a response that results from increased
nitrogen retention accompanied by an increased
intake of feed. - Increased growth rate Improvement in feed
efficiency. - Reduced deposition of body fat, which may, at
times, result in a lower carcass grade for
animals fed to the same weight as nontreated
animals.
27Hormone-Like Additives ?-agonists
- Molecules that structurally resemble epinephrine
- Caffeine, ephedrine, aspirin
- Easily made in the lab
- Muscle
- Increase in muscle synthesis
- Decrease in muscle breakdown
- Fat
- Decrease in lipogenesis
- Increase in lipolysis
- Ractopamine (Paylean)
- May impact behavior Aggression
28Antioxidants
- Used to prevent rancidity of unsaturated fatty
acids - Inclusion rates up to 0.25 Lb per ton feed.
- BHA/BHT (Butylated hydroxyanisole or toluene)
- Ethyoxiquin
- Vitamin E
- Rosemary
29Preservatives
- Used to prevent feed deterioration (mold/bacteria
inhibitors) Increase shelf life - Vitamin C
- Calcium sorbate
- Citric acid
- Phosphoric acid
- Propylene glycol (toxic to cats)
- Sodium propionate
- Sodium metabisulfate
30Buffers and Neutralizers
- Buffers Neutralizers
- Lessen the decrease in pH caused by VFA
production - Valuable for use in high concentrate diets to
ruminants but not high forage diets - Examples
- Sodium bicarbonate (most effective and most
common AKA baking soda) - Potassium bicarbonate
- Calcium carbonate
- Magnesium oxide
- Magnesium carbonate
31DFMs and Yeastwww.microbialcompendium.com
- Include cultures of live organisms, or
ingredients (or both) that stimulate microflora
in the gut to favor healthy environments. - Bacteria, Enzymes, Mold, Oligosaccharides, Yeast
- Lactobacillus, streptococcus, fungi, aspergillus,
bacillus - Probiotics
- Scientifically inconsistent
- Consist of microbial cultures
- Can stimulate cultural growth
- Reasons for use
- Increase/balance beneficial bacteria
- Reduce toxic byproducts of digestion
- Support rate of gain and feed efficiency
- Alleviate/minimize stress
- Various times for use
- When do you use them?
- Most common with horses, young animals
32Microorganisms found to be appropriate for use in
animal feeds
- Enterococcus cremoris
- Enterococcus diacetylactis
- Enterococcus faecium
- Enterococcus intermedius
- Enterococcus lactis
- Enterococcus thermophilus
- Yeast
- Aspergillus niger
- Leuconostoc mesenteroides
- Pediococcus acidilacticii
- Pediococcus cerevisiae (damnosus)
- Pediococcus pentosaceus
- Propionibacterium acidpropionici (cattle only)
- Propionibacterium freudenreichii
- Propionibacterium shermanii
- Saccharomyces cerevisiae
- Enterococcus cremoris
- Enterococcus diacetylactis
- Enterococcus faecium
- Aspergillus niger
- Aspergillus oryzae
- Bacillus coagulans
- Bacillus lentus
- Bacillus licheniformis
- Bacillus pumilus
- Bacillus subtilis
- Bacteroides amylophilus
- Bacteroides capillosus
- Bacteroides ruminocola
- Bacteroides suis
- Bifidobacterium adolescentis
- Bifidobacterium animalis
- Bifidobacterium bifidum
- Bifidobacterium infantis
- Bifidobacterium longum
- Bifidobacterium thermophilum
- Lactobacillus acidophilus
- Lactobacillus brevis
- Lactobacillus buchneri (cattle only)
- Lactobacillus bulgaricus
- Lactobacillus casei
- Lactobacillus cellobiosus
- Lactobacillus curvatus
- Lactobacillus delbruekii
- Lactobacillus farciminis (swine only)
- Lactobacillus fermentum
- Lactobacillus helveticus
- Lactobacillus lactis
- Lactobacillus plantarum
- Lactobacillus reuterii
- Leuconostoc mesenteroides
- Pediococcus acidilacticii
- Pediococcus cerevisiae (damnosus)
- Pediococcus pentosaceus