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Journal ArticleDOI

Ascites in poultry

R. J. Julian
- 01 Sep 1993 - 
- Vol. 22, Iss: 3, pp 419-454
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TLDR
It is possible that some meat-type chickens of the phenotype the authors have created have reached the limit of blood flow through their lungs and that future improvements in growth rate will only be possible if the lung and abdominal cavity capacities are enlarged.
Abstract
Research on ascites occurring in meat-type chickens reared at moderate and low altitude has shown that the pathogenesis is similar to that of the high altitude disease. Pulmonary hypertension (PH) caused by increased blood flow or increased resistance to flow in the lung results in right ventricular hypertrophy (RVH), valvular insufficiency, increased venous pressure and ascites. The structure of the avian heart, with its thin-walled right ventricle and muscular right atrioventricular valve, allows PH to induce heart failure quickly. The sudden increase in pulmonary hypertension syndrome (PHS) in meat-type chickens in the 1980s was associated with a rapid increase in growth rate and feed conversion. This was a result of a combination of genetic selection for fast-growing, heavy broilers with low feed conversion and a more dense, high caloric, pelleted food that supplied all the nutrients required for rapid growth and encouraged a high nutrient intake. PHS in meat-type chickens is usually primary pulmonary hypertension, that is, PH that occurs without evidence of prior heart or lung disease that could account for the increase in blood flow or resistance to flow that results in the increased pressure in the pulmonary arteries. The lungs of birds are firm and fixed in the thoracic cavity and they do not expand to draw air into the lung. The blood and air capillaries form a rigid network that allows only minimal expansion of the blood capillaries when more blood flow is required. Air is moved through the lung by abdominal movement which draws air in and out of the air sacs. The anatomy and physiology of the avian respiratory system are important in the susceptibility of meat-type chickens to PHS. The small stature of the modern meat-type chicken, the large, heavy breast mass, the pressure from abdominal contents on air sacs, and the small lung volume compared to body weight, may all be involved in the increased incidence of PHS. There is limited space for blood flow in the avian lung. Factors that increase blood flow or increase resistance to flow are additive. Increased blood viscosity caused by the polycythaemia of hypoxia, or increased erythrocyte rigidity of high Na (+), are more likely to produce PH in fast-growing than in slow-growing birds. Increased flow due to cold exposure is also additive. Ascites caused by PH is a production-related disease at low altitude. It can be prevented easily by restricting growth rate. It is possible that some meat-type chickens of the phenotype we have created have reached the limit of blood flow through their lungs and that future improvements in growth rate will only be possible if the lung and abdominal cavity capacities are enlarged.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid growth problems: ascites and skeletal deformities in broilers

TL;DR: In meat-type poultry, growth-related disease can be reduced or eliminated by reducing feed intake without affecting final body weight, and metabolic imbalance induced by high nutrient intake may cause some of the conditions.
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Production and growth related disorders and other metabolic diseases of poultry – A review

TL;DR: Poultry metabolic diseases occur primarily in two body systems: cardiovascular ailments, which in broiler chickens and turkeys are responsible for a major portion of the flock mortality, and musculoskeletal disorders, which account for less mortality, but in broilers andTurkeys slow down growth, and cause lameness, which remains a major welfare concern.
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The behaviour of broiler chickens and its modification by lameness

TL;DR: The alterations of the time budget, in particular the reductions in activities performed whilst standing, and the different feeding strategies adopted, are consistent with lameness imposing a cost on the affected broilers to the detriment of their welfare.
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Forty years of monensin for the control of coccidiosis in poultry

TL;DR: The discovery, mode of action, and efficacy of monensin are discussed, together with matters of importance to the poultry industry such as commercial use, drug resistance, toxicity, pharmacology and residues, host immunity to coccidiosis, and effects in other avian species.
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Pulmonary arterial hypertension (ascites syndrome) in broilers: A review

TL;DR: The cumulative evidence attributes the elevated pulmonary vascular resistance in PAH-susceptible broilers to an anatomically inadequate pulmonary vascular capacity, to excessive vascular tone reflecting the dominance of pulmonary vasoconstrictors over vasodilators, and to vascular pathology elicited by excessive hemodynamic stress.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

The Cardiovascular System

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