Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5805479 | Veterinary Parasitology | 2011 | 5 Pages |
A meta-analysis was carried out in order to study the effects of endoparasites on the performance of growing pigs. Criteria that should be considered for the publication selection were: (1) the health challenge caused by parasites; (2) pig in growing phase; (3) presentation of the nutritional composition of the diets and (4) animal performance. Meta-analysis followed three sequential analysis: graphical, correlation and variance-covariance. The group that were infected with parasites had an average daily feed intake 5% lower than that the control group (2044 vs. 2147 g dâ1; P < 0.001), their average daily weight gain was also 31% lower (665 vs. 987 g dâ1; P < 0.001) and their feed conversion ratio was 17% superior than that of the control group (3.07 vs. 2.62; P < 0.001). The variance decomposition demonstrated that 59% of the reduction in weight gain was explained by the reduction in their feed intake, as well as a 6% reduction being due to parasites.