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Journal of Animal Science, Vol 76, Issue 6 1636-1643, Copyright © 1998 by American Society of Animal Science


JOURNAL ARTICLE

L-ascorbyl-2-polyphosphate as a vitamin C source for segregated and conventionally weaned pigs

B. Z. de Rodas, C. V. Maxwell, M. E. Davis, S. Mandali, E. Broekman and B. J. Stoecker
Department of Animal Science, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater 74078, USA.

We conducted two experiments to evaluate the efficacy of a stable source of vitamin C for improving performance and iron status in early-weaned pigs. A preparation of L-ascorbyl-2-polyphosphate (Rovimix Stay-C 25, Roche Vitamins, Ames, IA and Bramus, NJ), which supplies 25% ascorbic acid activity in a stable form, served as the vitamin C source and was incorporated at dietary vitamin C levels of 0, 75, or 150 ppm. In Exp. 1, 72 pigs (14 +/- 2 d of age and 4.98 kg BW) were blocked based on initial BW and penned in groups of three (eight pens per treatment) in an off-site nursery for 42 d. Phase 1 lasted from d 0 to 14, Phase 2 from d 14 to 28, and Phase 3 from d 28 to 42 after weaning. Daily gain and gain:feed ratio (G/F) increased during Phase 1 (quadratic, P < .1 and P < .05, respectively), Phase 3 (linear, P < .1 and P < .01, respectively), and for the overall 42-d experiment (linear, P < .05 and P < .1, respectively) in response to increasing dietary vitamin C. At 14 d after weaning, plasma vitamin C increased (linear, P < .05) with increasing dietary vitamin C, but plasma iron, hemoglobin, and hematocrit were not influenced by dietary vitamin C. In Exp. 2, 120 pigs (20 +/- 3 d of age and 7.2 kg BW) were blocked based on initial BW and penned in groups of five (eight pens per treatment) in a conventional nursery system for 31 d. Phase 1 consisted of d 0 to 7, Phase 2 from d 7 to 17, and Phase 3 from d 17 to 31 after weaning. During the period from d 0 to 17 after weaning, ADG and G/F were improved (linear, P < .1) with increasing dietary vitamin C. At d 17 after weaning, plasma vitamin C and serum iron increased (linear, P < .05), but unbound iron-binding capacity and total iron-binding capacity decreased (linear, P < .05 and P < .1, respectively) with increasing dietary vitamin C. These results suggest that dietary vitamin C is needed during the first 42 d after weaning when pigs are weaned as early as 12 d of age and reared in an off-site nursery and during the first 17 d after weaning when pigs are weaned as early as 17 d of age and reared in a conventional nursery system. L-Ascorbyl-2-polyphosphate at a supplemental level of 75 ppm was adequate to meet the dietary vitamin C requirement of early-weaned pigs. Vitamin C supplementation with a stable product will improve performance in young pigs during the high-stress postweaning period and may be particularly beneficial to pigs weaned at a very early age.





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Copyright © 1998 by the American Society of Animal Science.