Body Weight and Adiposity Changes of Obese Gilts Provided Ad Libitum Ground Beef Versus High Carbohydrate Diets

This study investigated the impact of providing a red meat (GB; cooked ground beef; 63% lean) or high-carbohydrate diet (CON) on growth performance and body composition of obese gilts as a biomedical model for humans. Treatment differences were observed for total intake (kg consumed/d; P = 0.05), av...

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Main Author: Wellnitz, Krista R.
Format: Others
Published: North Dakota State University 2018
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10365/27336
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spelling ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-273362021-09-28T17:11:02Z Body Weight and Adiposity Changes of Obese Gilts Provided Ad Libitum Ground Beef Versus High Carbohydrate Diets Wellnitz, Krista R. This study investigated the impact of providing a red meat (GB; cooked ground beef; 63% lean) or high-carbohydrate diet (CON) on growth performance and body composition of obese gilts as a biomedical model for humans. Treatment differences were observed for total intake (kg consumed/d; P = 0.05), average caloric intake (calculated kcals/d; P = 0.003), BW change (P = 0.012), and a treatment by harvest day interaction (P = 0.001) for pancreas weight. Subcutaneous backfat measured adjacent the 10th thoracic vertebra expressed as a percentage change from d0 tended (P = 0.09) to be less in GB gilts. There was no evidence of cardiac ventricular inflammation across treatments (P > 0.21). Despite consuming more total feed and more calories, the GB gilts gained less BW and deposited less subcutaneous fat over 84 days. More research is needed to further understand the physiological effect of food on human nutrition and health. 2018-01-26T21:21:44Z 2018-01-26T21:21:44Z 2014 text/thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10365/27336 NDSU policy 190.6.2 https://www.ndsu.edu/fileadmin/policy/190.pdf application/pdf North Dakota State University
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
description This study investigated the impact of providing a red meat (GB; cooked ground beef; 63% lean) or high-carbohydrate diet (CON) on growth performance and body composition of obese gilts as a biomedical model for humans. Treatment differences were observed for total intake (kg consumed/d; P = 0.05), average caloric intake (calculated kcals/d; P = 0.003), BW change (P = 0.012), and a treatment by harvest day interaction (P = 0.001) for pancreas weight. Subcutaneous backfat measured adjacent the 10th thoracic vertebra expressed as a percentage change from d0 tended (P = 0.09) to be less in GB gilts. There was no evidence of cardiac ventricular inflammation across treatments (P > 0.21). Despite consuming more total feed and more calories, the GB gilts gained less BW and deposited less subcutaneous fat over 84 days. More research is needed to further understand the physiological effect of food on human nutrition and health.
author Wellnitz, Krista R.
spellingShingle Wellnitz, Krista R.
Body Weight and Adiposity Changes of Obese Gilts Provided Ad Libitum Ground Beef Versus High Carbohydrate Diets
author_facet Wellnitz, Krista R.
author_sort Wellnitz, Krista R.
title Body Weight and Adiposity Changes of Obese Gilts Provided Ad Libitum Ground Beef Versus High Carbohydrate Diets
title_short Body Weight and Adiposity Changes of Obese Gilts Provided Ad Libitum Ground Beef Versus High Carbohydrate Diets
title_full Body Weight and Adiposity Changes of Obese Gilts Provided Ad Libitum Ground Beef Versus High Carbohydrate Diets
title_fullStr Body Weight and Adiposity Changes of Obese Gilts Provided Ad Libitum Ground Beef Versus High Carbohydrate Diets
title_full_unstemmed Body Weight and Adiposity Changes of Obese Gilts Provided Ad Libitum Ground Beef Versus High Carbohydrate Diets
title_sort body weight and adiposity changes of obese gilts provided ad libitum ground beef versus high carbohydrate diets
publisher North Dakota State University
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10365/27336
work_keys_str_mv AT wellnitzkristar bodyweightandadipositychangesofobesegiltsprovidedadlibitumgroundbeefversushighcarbohydratediets
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