The prediction of body composition in poultry by estimation in vivo of total body water with tritiated water and deuterium oxide
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in British Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 59 (1) , 109-124
- https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19880015
Abstract
1. Birds (n169) which varied in age, live weight, nutritional history, physiological state and genotype were slaughtered and analysed for total body water. Before slaughter, birds were injected with the water isotopes tritiated water (TOH) or deuterium oxide (D2O), or both, to determine TOH space or D2O space, or both, as estimates of total body water in vivo.2. At the mean total body water of all birds determined by desiccation, of 1096·4 (SD 424·1) g, TOH space and D2O space overestimated total body water by 10·4 and 8·5 % respectively. The difference between the isotopes was significant (P< 0·05).3. Based on recovery of isotope it was postulated that the main reason for the observed overestimation of total body water in vivo was incomplete recovery of isotope due to the vacuum sublimation technique. The mean recovery (%) of added isotope to whole blood after vacuum sublimation was 93·0 (SD 2·6) and 92·4 (SD 5·5) of the theoretical concentrations of TOH and D2O respectively.4. Nevertheless, accurate prediction of total body water was obtained from regression equations which included live weight and isotope-dilution space. Values required logarithmic (base 10) transformation before derivation of linear and multiple linear regression equations, and the precision of prediction was determined by the residual standard deviation (RSD).5. Total body water could be predicted with nearly equal accuracy from live weight or isotope-dilution space (RSD 0·025 and 0·020 respectively). Prediction of carcass protein was more accurate from live weight (RSD 0·033) than from TOH space (RSD 0·036), and inclusion of both variables resulted in only a marginal decrease in RSD to 0·031.6. The prediction of carcass fat and energy was markedly improved by the inclusion of isotope-dilution space in conjunction with live weight compared with live weight alone.7. The relations show the developmental nature of body composition of domestic fowl given diets adequate in nutrients. The prediction equations demonstrate the precision possible for studies in which estimates of body composition in poultry are required without slaughter.This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Estimation of the body chemical composition of live cattle varying widely in fat contentThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1981
- Zur Bestimmung des Gesamtkörperwassers lebender Hühner mit der D2O‐VerdünnungsmethodeZeitschrift für Tierphysiologie Tierernährung und Futtermittelkunde, 1977
- The effect of route of dosing and method of estimation of tritiated water space on the determination of total body water and the prediction of body fat in sheepThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1974
- Undernutrition in grazing sheep. III.* Body composition and its estimation in vivoAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1972
- Estimation of water content by tritium dilution of animals subjected to rapid live-weight changesThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1969
- Correction for the separation of hydrogen isotopes during distillation in the determination of tritiumTalanta, 1964
- BODY WATER ESTIMATIONS IN RELATION TO BODY COMPOSITION AND INDIRECT CALORIMETRY IN RUMINANTS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1963
- Body composition in vivo. III. The composition of living ruminants and its relation to the tritiated water spacesAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1963
- CHANGES IN THE GROSS CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF THE MOUSE DURING GROWTH IN RELATION TO THE ASSESSMENT OF PHYSIOLOGICAL AGECanadian Journal of Animal Science, 1960