March 03, 2022

Interpretive Summary: Correlations of gestational hemoglobin level, placental trace elements content, and reproductive performances in pregnant sows

Interpretive Summary: Correlations of gestational hemoglobin level, placental trace elements content, and reproductive performances in pregnant sows

By: Liu Guo, Dongming Zhang, Wenjie Tang, Zhenglin Dong, Yawei Zhang, Shangchu Wang, Yulong Yin, and Dan Wan

Iron deficiency and iron excess may cause adverse outcomes during pregnancy. In sows’ feed, iron is added as ferrous sulfate, ferrous glycine, or other forms to improve their reproductive performance and prevent iron-deficiency anemia in their offspring. However, it is always ineffective and iron-deficiency anemia often occurs in piglets. To explore the iron requirements in pregnant sows, we conducted a large-scale farm study to track the hemoglobin levels, placental trace element content, and reproductive performances of hundreds of sows. The correlation between the hemoglobin levels, placental trace element content, and reproductive performance indicators of sows during pregnancy at different parities was analyzed. We found that pregnancy hemoglobin level of sows decreases during the gestation and varies at different parities. The hemoglobin level of sows during pregnancy was linearly negatively correlated with reproductive performance. The content of iron, zinc, manganese, and copper in the placenta was linearly positively correlated. Our results revealed that iron deficiency or excess in sows’ feed may not be conducive to the improvement of reproductive performance, and the optimal iron supplementation dose during pregnancy may depend on the iron status and number of fetuses of sow.

Read the full article on the Journal of Animal Science.