4.7 Article

Effect of Dexamethasone and Route of Administration on Sow Farrowing Behaviours, Piglet Delivery and Litter Performance

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani12070847

Keywords

dexamethasone; farrowing; sow behaviour; piglet performance

Funding

  1. University of Adelaide
  2. Australian Pork Limited

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The study found that dexamethasone can permeate through porcine vaginal mucosa, providing a non-injectable treatment option. Administering dexamethasone did not significantly impact farrowing performance, piglet survival rate, or behavior changes in sows.
Simple Summary The pain experienced during labor is one that is shared universally. When sows experience the pain of labor for the first time, the levels of discomfort can be so stressful that they lash out aggressively at their piglets. Sows new to the birthing experience may also have problems with delivery or resist nursing the litter for extended periods of time. To help younger sows during and after delivery, we treated a group with dexamethasone, a strong anti-inflammatory treatment. It was predicted that this anti-inflammatory would be able to provide some relief from the inflammatory pain associated with labor and help younger sows with their birthing processes and nursing of their litter. As a hormone that can easily pass through cell walls, it was also predicted that dexamethasone could pass directly through the vaginal membrane of a sow for a non-injectable treatment alternative. The inflammatory pain and stress some crated sows experience during farrowing has attendant risks of piglet-directed aggression, reduced teat exposure and hindered post-partum recovery. To counter this, the steroidal anti-inflammatory compound, dexamethasone, can be administered. To measure the potential for mucosal absorption as an alternative to injection, the permeability of porcine vaginal mucosa to dexamethasone was demonstrated using Franz cell diffusion. These studies found dexamethasone treatment diffused through vaginal mucosa at a constant rate, with 52.37 +/- 5.54% permeation in 6 h. To examine in vivo effects on farrowing outcomes, dexamethasone was administered to gilts and parity one sows on the day of expected farrowing. We hypothesized that it would provide relief from farrowing discomfort and reduce behaviours threatening piglet survival. Sows were randomly assigned to receive dexamethasone as an intramuscular injection (n = 23); dexamethasone applied topically into the vagina (n = 20), or to receive no dexamethasone (n = 23). Sows (n = 66) and piglets (n = 593) were monitored for performance indicators during farrowing and early lactation. A subset of sows (n = 24) was also video monitored continuously over 24 h for behaviours associated with pain, postural changes and piglet interactions. No differences were observed between treatment for farrowing performance, piglet survival or behavioural changes for sows experiencing their first or second farrowing (p > 0.05), rejecting the hypothesis that corticosteroid administration will improve sow farrowing performance. This investigation did, however, show that dexamethasone can permeate through porcine vaginal mucosa and so can be administered as a non-injectable treatment.

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