Layer Slider

Slide backgroundSlide thumbnail

Our newly discovered benefits of natural compounds including

daidzein and inositol in controlling important mechanisms

associated with Alzheimer's disease and other brain pathologies.

Natural Compounds Modulate Apolipoprotein E Gene and Protein

Expression in Fibroblasts Derived from Young and Old Female Alzheimer’s Patients

CLICK TO READ FULL PUBLICATION

Slide background
Slide backgroundSlide thumbnail
Slide backgroundSlide thumbnail
Slide backgroundTeamTeamTeam
Slide backgroundResearch TextResearch Text
Slide backgroundSlide thumbnail

Slide backgroundCell2Cell2
Slide backgroundVision1
Slide backgroundVideo2

Research

Research

NewsPage

Clinical Support

Latest News

ICON L

Holistic efficacy of specific nutrient synergy against avian flu virus: pathology and immunomodulation

E.K. Barbour, E.G. Rayya, H.A. Shaib, R.G. El Hakim, A.M. Abdel Nour, A.Niedzwiecki, S. Harakeh, M. Rath
Veterinaria Italiana 2007, 43(1): 43-54

Summary:
The authors evaluated the holistic efficacy of nine specific nutrient synergy (NS) against avian influenza virus (AIV) strain Lebanon 1 (H9N2). The study included two segments; the first was designed to determine the minimum dose among four doses (1X, 2X, 3X and 4X in which X = 24.4 mg/ml/bird) of NS, administered intraoesophageally, once per day between 7 and 14 days of age, resulting in an improvement of chicken performance without any toxic side-effects; the second aimed at reducing pathological effects and inducing immunomodulation by the determined safe dose of NS in chickens exposed to AIV.

The first segment showed that the daily oral administration of the NS to birds between 7 to 14 days of age at the 2X dose-level (320 mg/kg body weight or 48.8 mg/ml/bird) resulted in a consistent and significant improvement in the feed conversion (P<0.05) at 10 and 14 days of age, associated with a significant (P<0.05) increase in the liver weight index. In addition, the administration of NS at 2X level resulted in complete absence of toxicity signs (swollen infraorbital sinuses, ocular exudate, nasal discharge, thick oral saliva, diarrhoea, lameness and huddling) and complete absence of toxicity lesions (airsacculitis, hydropericardium signs, pericarditis, perihepatitis, splenomegaly and tracheitis). The four groups of birds that received levels 1X to 4X levels had significantly higher frequency of birds with gaseous caeca compared to the control group deprived of NS (P<0.05), a sign of higher fermentation activity in this organ. Data from the second segment of this research showed that the daily administration of NS at a level of 48.8 mg/ml/bird, between 7 to 14 days of age, to H9N2-challenged birds reduced specific pathological effects at 14 days of age namely: absence of rales at 3 days post H9N2 challenge and gross lesions (absence of tracheitis and enteritis at 7 days post challenge). Such reductions in signs and gross lesions were associated with a 63.4% reduction in immune responses to the hemagglutinin protein of the AIV, an indication that NS has a reducing effect on the viral infectivity in chickens.

Key Words:
Avian influenza, Chickens, Immunomodulation, Nutrient synergy, Viruses.

Full Study:

Printable PDF