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Journal ArticleDOI

Digesta flow and mineral absorption in lambs before and after weaning

J.P. Dillon, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1979 - 
- Vol. 92, Iss: 2, pp 289-297
TLDR
In this article, four young lambs fitted with cannulas at the pylorus and at the ileo-caecal junction were used to study the effects of weaning on digesta flow and mineral absorption.
Abstract
Four young lambs fitted with cannulas at the pylorus and at the ileo-caecal junction were used to study the effects of weaning on digesta flow and mineral absorption. Prior to weaning when milk alone was fed the small intestine was the major site for dry matter disappearance and for the absorption of Ca, P, Na and K. Both the small and the large intestine were, however, important sites for Mg absorption at this time. After weaning, when the lambs were fed a concentrate diet, at least two-thirds of the digested dry matter disappeared within the reticulo-rumen. The small intestine, however, still remained the major site for the absorption of Ca, P, Na and K. Most Mg absorption, in contrast, now occurred anterior to the pylorus and it would appear that the move from hindgut to foregut as a site for Mg absorption was directly associated with the introduction of dry feed and the development of fermentative digestion within the reticulo-rumen. Both before and after weaning the faeces was the major route for the excretion of Ca surplus to requirement and the faeces also became increasingly important as a pathway for P and Mg excretion once dry feed was given. The urine, in contrast, was consistently the major pathway for the excretion of Na and K.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pathophysiology of Grass Tetany and other Hypomagnesemias: Implications for Clinical Management

TL;DR: Mg absorption becomes more and more independent of ruminal K with increasing Mg concentration, which can be considered as an explanation for the well-known prophylaxis of hypomagnesemia by increasing oral Mg intake.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms and regulation of calcium absorption from the gastrointestinal tract in pigs and ruminants: comparative aspects with special emphasis on hypocalcemia in dairy cows

TL;DR: This review will elucidate some of the current concepts related to the mechanisms and sites of Ca absorption in pigs and ruminants with special emphasis on dairy cows where Ca homeostasis is occasionally compromised at the time of parturition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metabolites, water and mineral exchanges across the rumen wall: mechanisms and regulation

TL;DR: In this article, the absorption of acides gras volatils and of l'ammoniaque is investigated in the context of passage transmembranaire between ruminants and preestomacs.
Journal ArticleDOI

In vitro studies on calcium absorption from the gastrointestinal tract in small ruminants.

TL;DR: There is clear evidence for the rumen as a main site for active Ca2+ absorption in small ruminants as described for the upper small intestines of monogastric species.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An improved automated procedure for the determination of calcium in biological specimens.

TL;DR: An improved automated spectrophotometric method for calcium has been described which is directly applicable to serum, plasma, urine, and tissue ash samples and eliminates significant magnesium error.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative digestion of fresh herbage by sheep: III. The movement of Mg, Ca, P, K and Na in the digestive tract

TL;DR: The small intestine was the major site of net absorption for P and K and a minor site for Na, while a net secretion of Mg and Ca occurred into this region in relation to the animals' minimal daily requirements of these elements.
Journal ArticleDOI

The site of magnesium absorption from the ruminant stomach.

TL;DR: It is concluded that no significant absorption of Mg occurs from either the omasum or abomasum in sheep and that the reticulo-rumen is the principal site of MG absorption before the pylorus.
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