Low Toxin Studies "7 months of a RESTRICTED "vitamin" A diet did what to cattle? NOTHING"

charlie

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Abstract

Sixty-eight Angus-based steers (224 +/- 7.6 kg of BW) were used to evaluate the effects of a prolonged dietary vitamin A restriction on marbling and immunocompetency. Steers were allotted randomly to 1 of 2 treatments: LOW (no supplemental vitamin A) and HIGH (diet supplemented with 2,200 IU of vitamin A/kg of DM). Diets contained 60% high-moisture corn, 20% roasted soybeans, 10% corn silage, and 10% of a protein supplement. Steers were penned and fed individually. For the first 141 d, steers were program-fed to achieve a gain of 1.1 kg/d. The last 75 d of the experiment, steers were offered feed for ad libitum intake. At slaughter, serum and liver samples were taken to determine their retinol content. To evaluate immunocompetency, 10 steers per treatment were selected randomly on d 141 and received an ovalbumen vaccine, and 21 d later, the steers were revaccinated. On d 182, blood samples were taken from the vaccinated steers to determine serum antibody titers by ELISA. Steers were slaughtered after 216 d on feed. Carcass characteristics were determined, and LM samples were taken for composition analysis. Subcutaneous fat samples were taken for fatty acid composition analysis. Performance (ADG, DMI, and G:F) was not affected by vitamin A restriction (all P > 0.10). Hot carcass weight, 12th-rib fat, and yield grade did not differ between LOW and HIGH steers (all P > 0.10). Marbling score (LOW = 574 vs. HIGH = 568, P = 0.79) and i.m. fat (LOW = 5.0 vs. HIGH = 4.7% ether-extractable fat, P = 0.57) were not increased by vitamin A restriction. Serum (LOW = 18.7 vs. HIGH = 35.7 mug/dL, P < 0.01) and liver (LOW = 6.3 vs. HIGH = 38.1 mug/g, P < 0.01) retinol levels were lower in LOW steers compared with HIGH steers at slaughter. Response to ovalbumin vaccination was not affected by vitamin A restriction (LOW = 13.1 vs. HIGH = 12.8 log(2) titers, P = 0.60). Slight changes in the fatty acid profile of s.c. fat of the steers were detected. A greater proportion of MUFA (LOW = 41.7 vs. HIGH = 39.9%, P = 0.03) and fewer SFA (LOW = 47.1 vs. 48.7, P = 0.03) were observed in vitamin A-restricted steers. This suggests that vitamin A restriction may affect the activity of desaturase enzyme (desaturase activity index, LOW = 46.9 vs. HIGH = 44.9, P = 0.01). Feeding a low vitamin A diet for 216 d to Angus-based steers did not affect performance, marbling score, or animal health and immunocompetency. Slight changes in the fatty acid profile of s.c. fat were observed, suggesting that vitamin A restriction may have affected desaturase enzyme activity.
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View: https://x.com/NutriDetect/status/1767243073816600595?s=20
 

mosaic01

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One day we will have a clean food chain that removes or filters out carotenes and retinol, as well as other known toxins, so that humans can ingest clean food.

Currently, the food chain is being loaded with carotenes and retinol due to massive supplementation and carotene-rich feeds. There's even a farm that is feeding the cattle carrots, because it "improves" the taste of the beef, because the carrot taste will make it into the beef, due to the increased carotene concentrations.


That happens when people get addicted to carotenes and retinol.
 
EMF Mitigation - Flush Niacin - Big 5 Minerals

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