Animals (Nov 2015)

Dietary Lecithin Supplementation Can Improve the Quality of the M. Longissimus thoracis

  • Darryl N. D’Souza,
  • Bronwyn L. Blake,
  • Ian H. Williams,
  • Bruce P. Mullan,
  • David W. Pethick,
  • Frank R. Dunshea

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani5040405
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 4
pp. 1180 – 1191

Abstract

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Forty crossbred (Large White × Landrace × Duroc) female pigs (16.4 kg ± 0.94 kg) were used to investigate the effect of dietary lecithin supplementation on growth performance and pork quality. Pigs were randomly allocated to a commercial diet containing either 0, 3, 15 or 75 g lecithin/kg of feed during the grower and finisher growth phase. Pork from pigs consuming the diets containing 15 g and 75 g lecithin/kg had lower hardness ( P < 0.001) and chewiness ( P < 0.01) values compared to the controls. Dietary lecithin supplementation at 75 g/kg significantly increased ( P < 0.05) the linoleic acid and reduced ( P < 0.05) the myristic acid levels of pork compared to the control and the 3 g/kg and 15 g/kg lecithin supplemented treatments. Pigs fed the 75 g/kg lecithin supplemented diet had lower plasma cholesterol ( P < 0.05) at slaughter compared to pigs fed the control diet and the 3 g/kg and 15 g/kg lecithin supplemented treatments. These data indicate that dietary lecithin supplementation has the potential to improve the quality attributes of pork from female pigs.

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