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  • Title: Response of growing swine to dietary exposure to pure fumonisin B1 during an eight-week period: growth and clinical parameters.
    Author: Rotter BA, Thompson BK, Prelusky DB, Trenholm HL, Stewart B, Miller JD, Savard ME.
    Journal: Nat Toxins; 1996; 4(1):42-50. PubMed ID: 8680753.
    Abstract:
    Consumption of corn or corn-based products contaminated with Fusarium moniliforme/fumonisins has been associated with a variety of animal and human diseases and is a major food/feed safety issue. This study focused on the clinical toxicity and performance parameters in growing swing exposed to low to moderate levels of pure fumonisin B1 (FB.) for 8 weeks. Male (castrated) and female pigs were fed diets containing 0,0.1,1.0, and 10 mg FB1/kg diet (ppm). Weight gains and feed consumption were measured weekly. Blood samples were collected throughout the study, and various clinical and hematological parameters were measured. Because fumonisins are potent inhibitors of sphingolipid biosynthesis, sphinganine and sphingosine concentrations were determined in the liver, lung, and kidney. Organ weights and carcass quality were measured at the end of the trial. In general, male pigs were more adversely affected by FB1 in the diet than females. The average daily gain for males decreased by 8% for pigs fed 1.0 ppm and by 11% at 10.0 ppm, when compared to the control (0 ppm). Males fed 0.1 ppm showed an erratic growth pattern during the first 5 weeks of the experiment. Feed consumption for the same animals was somewhat higher than that of the controls during each of the first 4 weeks but thereafter was 6-7% lower each week as compared to controls. Female pigs fed FB1-diets showed a general enhancement of feed consumption until week 4. Among clinical chemistry parameters, cholesterol increased in males for the 1.0 and 10.0 ppm diets as compared to controls after 2 weeks, while the levels in both sexes were elevated for the 1.0 ppm diet only by the end of the experiment. Serum liver enzyme concentrations were altered during week 2 only. Changes were observed in the weight of the pancreas and adrenals for male pigs fed FB1 diets as compared to controls. The free sphinganine to free sphingosine ratio (biomarker of exposure in FB1-consuming animals) increased in all three organs for the 10 ppm diet, regardless of sex. The study indicated that FB1 can cause different effects at each dose level, at concentrations as low as 0.1 ppm (showing erratic growth) followed by a reduced growth and biochemical abnormalities in blood (1.0 ppm) and sphingolipid alterations in tissues (10.0 ppm). Some of these effects occurred below the exposure level that caused alteration in sphingolipid metabolism.
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