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    Get ready to tear this one apart boys...

    Scientists say new study shows pig health hurt by GM feed

    Jun 12, 2013 2:55 AM - 0 comments
    TEXT SIZE bigger text smaller text

    By: Carey Gillam
    Reuters
    Livestock

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Pigs fed a diet of only genetically modified (GM) grain showed markedly higher stomach inflammation than pigs who dined on conventional feed, according to a new study by a team of Australian scientists and U.S. researchers.

    The study adds to an intensifying public debate over the impact of genetically modified crops, which are widely used by U.S. and Latin American farmers and in many other countries around the world.

    The study was published in the June issue of the peer-reviewed Journal of Organic Systems by researchers from Australia who worked with two veterinarians and a farmer in Iowa to study the U.S. pigs.

    Lead researcher Judy Carman is an epidemiologist and biochemist and director of the Institute of Health and Environmental Research in Adelaide, Australia.

    The study was conducted over 22.7 weeks using 168 newly weaned pigs in a commercial U.S. piggery.

    One group of 84 ate a diet that incorporated GM soy and corn, and the other group of 84 pigs ate an equivalent non-GM diet. The corn and soy feed was obtained from commercial suppliers, the study said, and the pigs were reared under identical housing and feeding conditions. The pigs were then slaughtered roughly five months later and autopsied by veterinarians who were not informed which pigs were fed on the GM diet and which were from the control group.

    Researchers said there were no differences seen between pigs fed the GM and non-GM diets for feed intake, weight gain, mortality and routine blood biochemistry measurements.

    But those pigs that ate the GM diet had a higher rate of severe stomach inflammation -- 32 percent of GM-fed pigs, compared to 12 per cent of non-GM-fed pigs. The inflammation was worse in GM-fed males compared to non-GM fed males by a factor of 4.0, and GM-fed females compared to non-GM-fed females by a factor of 2.2. As well, GM-fed pigs had uteri that were 25 per cent heavier than non-GM fed pigs, the study said.

    The researchers said more long-term animal feeding studies need to be done.

    Biotech seeds are genetically altered to grow into plants that tolerate treatments of herbicide and resist pests, making producing crops easier for farmers. Some critics have argued for years that the DNA changes made to the transgenic plants engineer novel proteins that can be causing the digestive problems in animals and possibly in humans.

    The companies that develop these transgenic crops, using DNA from other bacteria and other species, assert they are more than proven safe over their use since 1996.

    CropLife International, a global federation representing the plant science industry, said more than 150 scientific studies have been done on animals fed biotech crops and to date, there is not scientific evidence of any detrimental impact.

    -- Carey Gillam reports on agribusiness and ag commodities for Reuters from St. Louis.

    #2
    Interesting. But that is all it is until
    it is replicated. The last paragraph
    holds more weight with me than one
    result.

    Comment


      #3
      Thanks for readin Coleville.

      If you think about this stuff in general it could mean a little more to you. Yes it is opinion, however, common sense opinion is something lacking at times in any scientific study --- from both sides of the fence.

      The liver is the most important organ in the body of an animal. Maybe second to the heart, but far ahead of the brain which is only an information storage center that can be adjusted by each and every human that carries one on his shoulders.

      When the liver is out of balance, it is always due to the food put into that particular animal.

      Maybe these problems found in the livers of cattle would be the same if they were not fed GMO products. Products designed to destroy insects from the inside out in an inflammatory way... or maybe not.

      The hog thing is even more interesting to me as hogs are more similar to humans than bovines. At least cattle have a couple more stomachs to rid themselves of the contaminants through the natural lymphatic system a little sooner in the process.

      So if we go directly to the human consuming grains, and compare the number of humans with gluten intolerance these days to GMO production, we also see a common curve.

      No --- one off --- not a scientific study, just living in the real world of food.

      USA - Problems with beef livers

      30 May 2013


      A high prevalence of Campylobacter in retail beef livers and their antimicrobial resistance raise concern about the safety of these retail products, according to Aneesa Noormohamed and Mohamed K. Fakhr of the University of Tulsa in Oklahoma.





      In a recent paper in International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, they report a study were to determine the prevalence of Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli in retail beef, beef livers and pork meats purchased from the Tulsa area and to characterise the isolates obtained through antimicrobial susceptibility testing.



      A total of 97 chilled retail beef (50 beef livers and 47 other cuts) and 100 pork samples were collected.



      The prevalence of Campylobacter in beef livers was 39/50 (78 per cent) while no Campylobacter was isolated from the other beef cuts.

      The prevalence in pork samples was 2/100 (2.0 per cent).



      A total of 108 Campylobacter isolates (102 beef livers isolates and six pork isolates) were subjected to antimicrobial resistance profiling against 16 different antimicrobials that belong to eight different antibiotic classes.



      Of the six pork Campylobacter coli isolates, four showed resistance to all antimicrobials tested.

      Among the beef liver isolates, the highest antibiotic resistances were to tetracyclines and Â-lactams, while the lowest resistances were to macrolides, aminoglycosides, lincosamides and phenicols.



      Resistances to the fluoroquinolone, macrolide, aminoglycoside, tetracycline, b-lactam, lincosamide and phenicol antibiotic classes were significantly higher in Campylobacter coli than Campylobacter jejuni isolates.



      Multidrug Resistance (MDR) among the 102 Campylobacter (33 Campylobacter jejuni and 69 Campylobacter coli) beef liver isolates was significantly higher in Campylobacter coli (62 per cent) than Campylobacter jejuni (39 per cent).

      Comment


        #4
        Rkaiser. What was the non GMO feed ? "One
        group of 84 ate a diet that incorporated GM soy
        and corn, and the other group of 84 pigs ate an
        equivalent non-GM diet." Was the non gm diet
        corn and soy If they are not fed the identical feed
        then what kind of comparison is it really?
        Just wondering if you realize in your day to day
        life what impacts GMO have. Do you drink wine or
        how do you think the bread you eat is baked?

        Comment


          #5
          Kaiser, do you have the actual link?
          please post.

          Comment


            #6
            Doh!! What do you think vvalk? they fed them hay and
            oats to skew the result? You either have to accept
            science or you don't.

            Comment


              #7
              Grassfarmer. Why make that assumption? I see
              the anti GMO studies all the time that skew the
              results this way. It says equivalent, you tell me if
              there isn't ambiguity in the sentence.

              Comment


                #8
                Vvalk please provide links for the skewed studies
                that you "see all the time"

                Comment


                  #9
                  No ambiguity if you know what the word equivalent
                  means.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    The following is not ambiguous. I'm sure charliep
                    forgot to post it:


                    “On May 24, 2013 the Plant Health Department
                    of the Belize Agricultural Health Authority (BAHA)
                    discovered suspected genetically modified
                    soybean seeds in Northern Belize.  As a result,
                    samples of the suspected soybean seeds were
                    submitted to BAHA’s Plant Health Diagnostics
                    Laboratory in Central Farm for GMO screening.  
                    The screening tests were conducted on May 28
                    and all the samples tested positive indicating that
                    the seeds were genetically modified.

                    A further set of samples were then sent to
                    Eurofins Genescan Laboratories in the United
                    States on May 30 for a confirmatory test using
                    Polymerase Chain Reaction or PCR technology.
                    On June 5th, BAHA received results of the
                    confirmatory test, which verified the results of
                    previous tests conducted by BAHA on the
                    soybean seeds.

                    No need to say any more about trust, is there
                    now.

                    The greatest weapon of all will be food that
                    sterilizes groups of people.... on purpose. Im
                    pleased if Vilkings are able to recall inherent
                    violence. Pars

                    Comment

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