04753nam 2201177z- 450 991055715440332120231214133054.0(CKB)5400000000040513(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/68300(EXLCZ)99540000000004051320202105d2021 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMycotoxins Occurence in Feed and Their Influence on Animal HealthBasel, SwitzerlandMDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute20211 electronic resource (240 p.)3-03943-847-6 3-03943-848-4 According to the presented studies, the health condition of animals in rearing and breeding should be regularly monitored. This would allow early detection of delicate deviations in the body of clinically healthy individuals. Unfortunately, regular monitoring of the health of animals in commercial production is not performed. It follows that this type of research should be an introduction to further, more inquisitive steps. This can form the basis for further courses of action, indicating which organs or tissues field doctors or researchers should be interested in and what to pay attention to in order to find the correct answer, concerning the situation in the animal body. In the future, we should determine biomedical markers for use in precision veterinary medicine. In human medicine, this has been practiced with great success. The problem, however, is that we are getting to know more and more substances produced by mold fungi. This causes a build-up of new interpretative problems, causing health conditions (diagnosis), as well as analytical problems. To fully understand the results we need new techniques to assess toxicological and chemical hazards, including those related to undesirable substances. We need a solid knowledge of the biological pathways underlying the toxicity and tolerance to interference factors toxicological processes. We hope that the presented study will allow for a better understanding of mycotoxicoses that bother us and our animals, which will allow for more effective preventive actions.Research & information: generalbicsscBiology, life sciencesbicssczearalenonelow dosessteroid hormonesbiotransformationpre-pubertal giltsmodified mycotoxinco-occurrencecorn silageCIEBWST-1NRSRBsphingolipid metabolismSa/Soglobal surveyfinished pig feedemerging mycotoxinsDONtoxicitycombined toxicityIPEC-1deoxynivalenolIPEC-J2cell damageNF-κB inflammatory signal pathwaypet foodFusariumergosterolmycotoxinstrichothecenesfumonisin B1HPLCbioavailabilityestradioltestosteroneblood concentrationdairyaflatoxinSub-Saharan Africaaflatoxin M1GALToxidative stresscytokinemetabolismCordyceps fungimass productionbiosynthetic gene clustersafetyenteric nervous systemgastrointestinal tractmammalsanimal pathologyintestinestoxinsfeedhistologyultrastructurepighepatocyteliversynbioticsturkeysintestinal microbiotafecal enzymesochratoxin AResearch & information: generalBiology, life sciencesGajęcki Maciejedt1322896Gajęcka MagdalenaedtZielonka ŁukaszedtGajęcki MaciejothGajęcka MagdalenaothZielonka ŁukaszothBOOK9910557154403321Mycotoxins Occurence in Feed and Their Influence on Animal Health3035231UNINA