Animals (Dec 2021)

Probiotics and Postbiotics as Substitutes of Antibiotics in Farm Animals: A Review

  • Daria Zamojska,
  • Adriana Nowak,
  • Ireneusz Nowak,
  • Ewa Macierzyńska-Piotrowska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11123431
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
p. 3431

Abstract

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Since 2006, the use of growth-promoting antibiotics has been banned throughout the European Union. To meet the expectations of livestock farmers, various studies have been carried out with the use of lactic acid bacteria. Scientists are trying to obtain the antimicrobial effect against the most common pathogens in large-scale farms. Supplementing the diet of broilers with probiotics (live, nonpathogenic microorganisms) stabilized the intestinal microbiota, which improved the results of body weight gain (BWG) and feed intake (FI). The positive effect of probiotics based on lactic acid bacteria has been shown to prevent the occurrence of diarrhea during piglet weaning. The antagonistic activity of postbiotics (inanimate bacteria, cell components, or post-fermentation by-products) from post-culture media after lactobacilli cultures has been proven on Staphylococcus aureus—the pathogen most often responsible for causing mastitis among dairy cows. The article aims to present the latest research examining the antagonistic effect of lactic acid bacteria on the most common pathogens in broilers, piglets, pigs, and cow farms.

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