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Estimation of empty body and carcass chemical composition of lactating and growing cattle: comparison of imaging, adipose cellularity, and rib dissection methods

The aim of present study was to compare in vivo and post mortem methods for estimating the empty body (EB) and carcass chemical compositions of Simmental lactating and growing cattle. Indirect methods were calibrated against the direct post mortem reference determination of chemical compositions of...

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Autores principales: Xavier, Caroline, Driesen, Charlotte, Siegenthaler, Raphael, Dohme-Meier, Frigga, Le Cozler, Yannick, Lerch, Sylvain
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9186311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35702177
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tas/txac066
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author Xavier, Caroline
Driesen, Charlotte
Siegenthaler, Raphael
Dohme-Meier, Frigga
Le Cozler, Yannick
Lerch, Sylvain
author_facet Xavier, Caroline
Driesen, Charlotte
Siegenthaler, Raphael
Dohme-Meier, Frigga
Le Cozler, Yannick
Lerch, Sylvain
author_sort Xavier, Caroline
collection PubMed
description The aim of present study was to compare in vivo and post mortem methods for estimating the empty body (EB) and carcass chemical compositions of Simmental lactating and growing cattle. Indirect methods were calibrated against the direct post mortem reference determination of chemical compositions of EB and carcass, determined after grinding and analyzing the water, lipid, protein, mineral masses, and energy content. The indirect methods applied to 12 lactating cows and 10 of their offspring were ultrasound (US), half-carcass and 11th rib dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scans, subcutaneous and perirenal adipose cell size (ACS), and dissection of the 11th rib. Additionally, three-dimensional (3D) images were captured for 8 cows. Multiple linear regressions with leave-one-out-cross-validations were tested between predictive variables derived from the methods tested, and the EB and carcass chemical compositions. Partial least square regressions were used to estimate body composition with morphological traits measured on 3D images. Body weight (BW) alone estimated the EB and carcass composition masses with a root mean squared error of prediction (RMSEP) for the EB from 1 kg for minerals to 12.4 kg for lipids, and for carcass from 0.9 kg for minerals to 7.8 kg for water. Subcutaneous adipose tissue thickness measured by US was the most accurate in vivo predictor when associated with BW to estimate chemical composition, with the EB lipid mass RMSEP = 11 kg and R(2) = 0.75; carcass water mass RMSEP = 6 kg and R(2) = 0.98; and carcass energy content RMSEP = 236 MJ and R(2) = 0.91. Post mortem, carcass lipid mass was best estimated by half-carcass DXA scan (RMSEP = 2 kg, R(2) = 0.98), 11th rib DXA scan (RMSEP = 3 kg, R(2) = 0.96), 11th rib dissection (RMSEP = 4 kg, R(2) = 0.92), and perirenal ACS (RMSEP = 6 kg, R(2) = 0.79) in this respective order. The results obtained by 11th rib DXA scan were accurate and close to the half-carcass DXA scan with a reduction in scan time. Morphological traits from 3D images delivered promising estimations of the cow EB and carcass chemical component masses with an error less than 13 kg for the EB lipid mass and than 740 MJ for the EB energy. Future research is required to test the 3D imaging method on a larger number of animals to confirm and quantify its interest in estimating body composition in living animals.
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spelling pubmed-91863112022-06-13 Estimation of empty body and carcass chemical composition of lactating and growing cattle: comparison of imaging, adipose cellularity, and rib dissection methods Xavier, Caroline Driesen, Charlotte Siegenthaler, Raphael Dohme-Meier, Frigga Le Cozler, Yannick Lerch, Sylvain Transl Anim Sci Technology in Animal Science The aim of present study was to compare in vivo and post mortem methods for estimating the empty body (EB) and carcass chemical compositions of Simmental lactating and growing cattle. Indirect methods were calibrated against the direct post mortem reference determination of chemical compositions of EB and carcass, determined after grinding and analyzing the water, lipid, protein, mineral masses, and energy content. The indirect methods applied to 12 lactating cows and 10 of their offspring were ultrasound (US), half-carcass and 11th rib dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scans, subcutaneous and perirenal adipose cell size (ACS), and dissection of the 11th rib. Additionally, three-dimensional (3D) images were captured for 8 cows. Multiple linear regressions with leave-one-out-cross-validations were tested between predictive variables derived from the methods tested, and the EB and carcass chemical compositions. Partial least square regressions were used to estimate body composition with morphological traits measured on 3D images. Body weight (BW) alone estimated the EB and carcass composition masses with a root mean squared error of prediction (RMSEP) for the EB from 1 kg for minerals to 12.4 kg for lipids, and for carcass from 0.9 kg for minerals to 7.8 kg for water. Subcutaneous adipose tissue thickness measured by US was the most accurate in vivo predictor when associated with BW to estimate chemical composition, with the EB lipid mass RMSEP = 11 kg and R(2) = 0.75; carcass water mass RMSEP = 6 kg and R(2) = 0.98; and carcass energy content RMSEP = 236 MJ and R(2) = 0.91. Post mortem, carcass lipid mass was best estimated by half-carcass DXA scan (RMSEP = 2 kg, R(2) = 0.98), 11th rib DXA scan (RMSEP = 3 kg, R(2) = 0.96), 11th rib dissection (RMSEP = 4 kg, R(2) = 0.92), and perirenal ACS (RMSEP = 6 kg, R(2) = 0.79) in this respective order. The results obtained by 11th rib DXA scan were accurate and close to the half-carcass DXA scan with a reduction in scan time. Morphological traits from 3D images delivered promising estimations of the cow EB and carcass chemical component masses with an error less than 13 kg for the EB lipid mass and than 740 MJ for the EB energy. Future research is required to test the 3D imaging method on a larger number of animals to confirm and quantify its interest in estimating body composition in living animals. Oxford University Press 2022-06-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9186311/ /pubmed/35702177 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tas/txac066 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society of Animal Science. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Technology in Animal Science
Xavier, Caroline
Driesen, Charlotte
Siegenthaler, Raphael
Dohme-Meier, Frigga
Le Cozler, Yannick
Lerch, Sylvain
Estimation of empty body and carcass chemical composition of lactating and growing cattle: comparison of imaging, adipose cellularity, and rib dissection methods
title Estimation of empty body and carcass chemical composition of lactating and growing cattle: comparison of imaging, adipose cellularity, and rib dissection methods
title_full Estimation of empty body and carcass chemical composition of lactating and growing cattle: comparison of imaging, adipose cellularity, and rib dissection methods
title_fullStr Estimation of empty body and carcass chemical composition of lactating and growing cattle: comparison of imaging, adipose cellularity, and rib dissection methods
title_full_unstemmed Estimation of empty body and carcass chemical composition of lactating and growing cattle: comparison of imaging, adipose cellularity, and rib dissection methods
title_short Estimation of empty body and carcass chemical composition of lactating and growing cattle: comparison of imaging, adipose cellularity, and rib dissection methods
title_sort estimation of empty body and carcass chemical composition of lactating and growing cattle: comparison of imaging, adipose cellularity, and rib dissection methods
topic Technology in Animal Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9186311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35702177
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tas/txac066
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