4.7 Article

The Course of Parturition Affects Piglet Condition at Birth and Survival and Growth through the Nursery Phase

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ANIMALS
卷 8, 期 5, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani8050060

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parturition; asphyxia; piglet; sow; performance; neonatal

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Simple Summary In this study, data were collected on the condition in which piglets were born, and this was related to their position in the birth order, and to the progress of parturition. The objective of the study was to find out if these observations were related to performance in early life, up to 10 weeks. It appeared that the later the piglets were born in a litter, the higher the risk of being stillborn, and this was aggravated in sows that took a relatively long time to give birth to their litter. In the first few piglets in a litter, risk of stillbirth was only 2%, whereas this increased to 17% in piglets born 13th in the litter or later. Similarly, birth order affected the condition of the liveborn piglets, with blood values such as pH being evident of suboptimal oxygenation in piglets born later. These blood values were predictive of neonatal behaviour such as colostrum intake, but also for neonatal survival and growth during suckling and even to 10 weeks of life. These data are the first in piglets to emphasise the impact of condition at birth on survival and growth until the end of the nursery phase. Abstract The aim of this study was to relate the course of parturition to the condition of piglets at birth, based on umbilical cord blood acid-base values, and relate the condition at birth to neonatal survival and performance up to 10 weeks of life. Data were collected from 37 spontaneous unassisted parturitions, and neonatal performance was based on observations of 516 piglets. Stillbirth rate increased from 2% in the first piglets, to 17% in piglets born 13th in the litter or later. This was aggravated in sows with longer than average stage II of parturition. Umbilical cord blood values also reflected the effect of birth order, with pH decreasing and lactate increasing in the course of parturition. Interestingly, sows that had a long expulsion stage of parturition also took longer to give birth to the first four piglets (r = 0.74), suggesting that sows with complicated parturition were already experiencing problems at the start of expulsion of piglets. Piglets with signs of asphyxia, based on umbilical blood lactate higher than 4.46 mmol/L, were slower to start suckling, had a higher risk of neonatal mortality, and had a slower growth rate over the first 10 weeks of life.

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