Rob Patterson
21 Papers
18 Citations
Rob Patterson is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 12 publications.
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Papers
Responses of broiler chickens to Eimeria challenge when fed a nucleotide-rich yeast extract.
H. Leung,Alexander Yitbarek,R. Snyder,Rob Patterson,John R. Barta,N.A. Karrow,Elijah G. Kiarie +6 more
TL;DR: Eimeria impaired performance and gut function and shifted gut microbiome; YN improved performance independently, attenuated Eimeria damage on indices of gut function, and modulated cecal microbiome.
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Short-term effect of supplemental yeast extract without or with feed enzymes on growth performance, immune status and gut structure of weaned pigs challenged with Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide
TL;DR: The LPS challenged piglets receiving enzymes + yeast extract showed beneficial responses in gut structure and immunity commensurate with those receiving antibiotics, though the latter had better overall growth performance.
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The effects of feeding yeast bioactives to broiler breeders and/or their offspring on growth performance, gut development, and immune function in broiler chickens challenged with Eimeria.
Z. Lu,Aizwarya Thanabalan,H. Leung,R. Akbari Moghaddam Kakhki,Rob Patterson,Elijah G. Kiarie +5 more
TL;DR: Eimeria challenge reduced growth performance and had negative effects on indices of intestinal function and health in broiler chickens challenged with Eimeria and fed YB to BB and/or to broiler chicks.
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Nucleotide-rich yeast extract fed to broiler chickens challenged with Eimeria: impact on growth performance, jejunal histomorphology, immune system, and apparent retention of dietary components and caloric efficiency1.
TL;DR: In conclusions, independent of Eimeria challenge, supplemental YN had no effect on growth performance, caloric efficiency, and intestinal function but increased immune organ weights.
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Growth performance, gastrointestinal weight, microbial metabolites and apparent retention of components in broiler chickens fed up to 11% rice bran in a corn-soybean meal diet without or with a multi-enzyme supplement.
Juan Sanchez,Aizwarya Thanabalan,Tanka Khanal,Rob Patterson,Bogdan A. Slominski,Elijah G. Kiarie +5 more
TL;DR: Looking at the effects of adding up to 11% rice bran in corn-soybean meal diets fed to broiler chickens without or with a multi-enzyme supplement revealed that RB increased gizzard weight and reduced final BW whereas MES improved growth and energy utilization.
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