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Featured researches published by Anna Valros.


Physiology & Behavior | 2017

To be blamed or pitied? The effect of illness on social behavior, cytokine levels and feed intake in undocked boars

Camilla Munsterhjelm; Janicke Nordgreen; Frida Aae; Mari Heinonen; K. Olstad; T. Aasmundstad; Andrew M. Janczak; Anna Valros

Tail biting is detrimental to animal welfare and has negative consequences for producer economy. Poor health is one of the risk factors for tail biting. The first aim of this study was therefore to test for links between health status and behavior related to tail biting at the individual level. The second aim of this study was to test whether variation in cytokines was related to variation in social behavior. These small molecules produced upon immune activation are known to influence behavior both in the direction of withdrawal and increased aggression. This could potentially increase non-functional social behavior and thereby the risk of a tail biting outbreak. To investigate this, we collected behavioral data, health data, feeding data and blood samples from undocked boars at a test station farm in Norway. We compared groups with three different diagnoses: osteochondrosis diagnosed by computer tomography scanning (OCSAN), osteochondrosis diagnosed by clinical examination (OCCLIN) and respiratory tract disease (RESP), with healthy controls (CTR). We tested whether the diagnoses were associated with feeding and growth, social behavior and cytokine levels. We then tested whether there were correlations between cytokine levels and social behavior. We also provide raw data on cytokine levels in the extended sample (N=305) as there are few publications on cytokine levels measured in pigs living under commercial conditions. OCCLIN pigs visited the feeder less, and fed longer compared to CTR pigs. Pigs diagnosed with RESP showed a large drop in growth the first week after filming, which corresponds to the week they were likely to have been diagnosed with illness, and a tendency to compensatory increase in the week after that. Social behavior differed between experimental groups with OCSCAN pigs receiving more social behavior (both aggressive and non-aggressive) compared to CTR, and RESP pigs tending to perform more ear- and tail-biting than controls. There were no differences in absolute levels of cytokines between categories. However IL1-ra and IL-12 showed correlations with several behaviors that have been shown by others to be associated with current or future tail biting activity. To our knowledge, this is the first published study indicating a role for illness in non-functional social behavior in pigs and the first showing a correlation between cytokine levels and social behavior.


Porcine Health Management | 2018

Effect of oral KETOPROFEN treatment in acute respiratory disease outbreaks in finishing pigs

Outi Hälli; Minna Haimi-Hakala; Tapio Laurila; Claudio Oliviero; Elina Viitasaari; Toomas Orro; Olli Peltoniemi; Mika Scheinin; Saija Sirén; Anna Valros; Mari Heinonen

BackgroundInfection with respiratory pathogens can influence production as well as animal welfare. There is an economical and ethical need to treat pigs that suffer from respiratory diseases. Our aim was the evaluation of the possible effects of oral NSAID medication given in feed in acute outbreaks of respiratory disease in finishing pigs. The short- and long-term impact of NSAID dosing on clinical signs, daily weight gain, blood parameters and behaviour of growing pigs in herds with acute respiratory infections were evaluated. Four finishing pig farms suffering from acute outbreaks of respiratory disease were visited thrice after outbreak onset (DAY 0, DAY 3 and DAY 30). Pigs with the most severe clinical signs (Nxa0=u2009160) were selected as representative pigs for the herd condition. These pigs were blood sampled, weighed, evaluated clinically and their behaviour was observed. After the first visit, half of the pens (five pigs per pen in four pens totalling 20 representative pigs per herd, altogether 80 pigs in four herds) were treated with oral ketoprofen (target dose 3xa0mg/kg) mixed in feed for three days and the other half (80 pigs) with a placebo. In three of the herds, some pigs were treated also with antimicrobials, and in one herd the only pharmaceutical treatment was ketoprofen or placebo.ResultsCompared to the placebo treatment, dosing of ketoprofen reduced sickness behaviour and lowered the rectal temperature of the pigs. Clinical signs, feed intake or blood parameters were not different between the treatment groups. Ketoprofen treatment was associated with somewhat reduced weight gain over the 30-day follow-up period. Concentration analysis of the S- and R-enantiomers of ketoprofen in serum samples collected on DAY 3 indicated successful oral drug administration.ConclusionsKetoprofen mainly influenced the behaviour of the pigs, while it had no effect on recovery from respiratory clinical signs. However, the medication may have been started after the most severe clinical phase of the respiratory disease was over, and this delay might complicate the evaluation of treatment effects. Possible negative impact of ketoprofen on production parameters requires further evaluation.


Physiology & Behavior | 2018

The effect of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on inflammatory markers in blood and brain and on behavior in individually-housed pigs

Janicke Nordgreen; Camilla Munsterhjelm; Frida Aae; Anastasija Popova; Preben Boysen; Birgit Ranheim; Mari Heinonen; Joanna Raszplewicz; Petteri Piepponen; Andreas Lervik; Anna Valros; Andrew M. Janczak

Most of us have experienced deterioration of mood while ill. In humans, immune activation is associated with lethargy and social withdrawal, irritability and aggression; changes in social motivation could, in theory, lead to less functional interactions. This might also be the case for animals housed in close confinement. Tail biting in pigs is an example of damaging social behavior, and sickness is thought to be a risk factor for tail biting outbreaks. One possible mechanism whereby sickness may influence behavior is through cytokines. To identify possible mediators between immune activation and behavioral change, we injected 16 gilts with lipopolysaccharide (LPS; O111:B4; 1.5u202fμgu202fkg-1 IV through a permanent catheter). In LPS-treated pigs, a significant increase in cortisol, TNF-α, IL-1 receptor antagonist, IL-6, and IL-8 was observed alongside decreased activity within the first 6u202fh after the injection. CRP was elevated at 12 and 24u202fh after injection, and food intake was reduced for the first 24u202fh after injection. Three days post-injection, LPS pigs had lower levels of noradrenaline in their hypothalamus, hippocampus and frontal cortex compared to saline-injected pigs. Pigs injected with LPS also had higher levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokine IFN-γ in their frontal cortex compared to saline-injected pigs. Thus, a low dose of LPS can induce changes in brain cytokine levels and neurotransmitter levels that persist after inflammatory and stress markers in the periphery have returned to baseline levels.


Animal Welfare | 2018

Case control study on environmental, nutritional and management-based risk factors for tail biting in long-tailed pigs

Pa Kallio; Andrew M. Janczak; Anna Valros; S. A. Edwards; Mari Heinonen

A case control study with a questionnaire was carried out to compare feeding practices, diet composition, housing and management in 78 herds with or without a history of tail-biting in undocked pigs (Sus scrofa) in Finland. Tail-biting was measured as the mean annual prevalence score of tail-biting damage (TBD) for a farm. Logistic regression parameters were calculated separately for risk factors present in piglet (lactation), weaner, and finishing units. Risk factors found in piglet units for TBD were slatted floors and area of slats. In the weaner units, slatted floors, area of slats, use of whey or wheat in the diet, and use of purchased compound feeds were associated with a risk of TBD. In the finishing units, slatted floors, area of slats, increasing number of finisher pigs at the farm, absence of bedding, liquid feeding, several meals per day, specialised production type and a group size greater than nine pigs were found as risk factors for TBD. Increased farm size was connected to risk for TBD in the overall dataset. The nutritional risk factors seem to operate together with other risk factors, but with relatively lower odds. The risk factors of undocked herds in this study seem to be similar to the risk factors from earlier studies of docked pigs. This study provides information which can be used to refine decision-support tools for management of the potentially higher risk for tail-biting among long-tailed pigs, thus aiding compliance with EU law and enhancing pig welfare.


International Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Information Systems | 2015

Image Quality Assessment and Outliers Filtering in an Image-Based Animal Supervision System

Ehsan Khoramshahi; Juha Hietaoja; Anna Valros; Jinhyeon Yun; Matti Pastell

This paper presents a probabilistic framework for the image quality assessment (QA), and filtering of outliers, in an image-based animal supervision system (asup). The proposed framework recognizes asups imperfect frames in two stages. The first stage deals with the similarity analysis of the same-class distributions. The objective of this stage is to maximize the separability measures by defining a set of similarity indicators (SI) under the condition that the number of permissible values for them is restricted to be relatively low. The second stage, namely faulty frame recognition (FFR), deals with asups QA training and real-time quality assessment (RTQS). In RTQS, decisions are made based on a real-time quality assessment mechanism such that the majority of the defected frames are removed from the consecutive sub routines that calculate the movements. The underlying approach consists of a set of SI indexes employed in a simple Bayesian inference model. The results confirm that a significant amount of defected frames can be efficiently classified by this approach. The performance of the proposed technique is demonstrated by the classification on a cross-validation set of mixed high and low quality frames. The classification shows a true positive rate of 88.6% while the false negative rate is only about 2.5%.


Applied Animal Behaviour Science | 2013

Nest-building in sows: Effects of farrowing housing on hormonal modulation of maternal characteristics

Jinhyeon Yun; Kirsi-Marja Swan; Kirsi Vienola; C. Farmer; Claudio Oliviero; Olli Peltoniemi; Anna Valros


Applied Animal Behaviour Science | 2014

Prepartum nest-building has an impact on postpartum nursing performance and maternal behaviour in early lactating sows

Jinhyeon Yun; Kirsi-Marja Swan; C. Farmer; Claudio Oliviero; Olli Peltoniemi; Anna Valros


Applied Animal Behaviour Science | 2015

Effects of prepartum housing environment on abnormal behaviour, the farrowing process, and interactions with circulating oxytocin in sows

Jinhyeon Yun; Kirsi-Marja Swan; Claudio Oliviero; Olli Peltoniemi; Anna Valros


Livestock Science | 2014

Farrowing environment has an impact on sow metabolic status and piglet colostrum intake in early lactation

Jinhyeon Yun; Kirsi-Marja Swan; K. Vienola; Yoo Yong Kim; Claudio Oliviero; Olli Peltoniemi; Anna Valros


Applied Animal Behaviour Science | 2014

Chewable materials before weaning reduce tail biting in growing pigs

Helena Telkänranta; Kirsi Swan; Heikki Hirvonen; Anna Valros

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Andrew M. Janczak

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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Outi Hälli

University of Helsinki

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