Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi
Sao Paulo State University
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Featured researches published by Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi.
Journal of Animal Science | 2008
L. D. de-Oliveira; Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi; M. C. C. Oliveira; Ricardo Souza Vasconcellos; Rodrigo Sousa Bazolli; Gener Tadeu Pereira; Flávio Prada
The effects of diets with different starch sources on the total tract apparent digestibility and glucose and insulin responses in cats were investigated. Six experimental diets consisting of 35% starch were extruded, each containing one of the following ingredients: cassava flour, brewers rice, corn, sorghum, peas, or lentils. The experiment was carried out on 36 cats with 6 replications per diet in a completely randomized block design. The brewers rice diet offered greater DM, OM, and GE digestibility than the sorghum, corn, lentil, and pea diets (P < 0.05). For starch digestibility, the brewers rice diet had greater values (98.6%) than the sorghum (93.9%), lentil (95.2%), and pea (96.3%) diets (P < 0.05); however, starch digestibility was >93% for all the diets, proving that despite the low carbohydrate content of carnivorous diets, cats can efficiently digest this nutrient when it is properly processed into kibble. Mean and maximum glucose concentration and area under the glucose curve were greater for the corn-based diet than the cassava flour, sorghum, lentil, and pea diets (P < 0.05). The corn-based diets led to greater values for the mean glucose incremental concentration (10.2 mg/dL), maximum glucose incremental concentration (24.8 mg/dL), and area under the incremental glucose curve (185.5 mg.dL(-1).h(-1)) than the lentil diet (2.9 mg/dL, 3.1 mg/dL, and -40.4 mg.dL(-1).h(-1), respectively; P < 0.05). When compared with baseline values, only the corn diet stimulated an increase in the glucose response, occurring at 4 and 10 h postmeal (P < 0.05). The corn-based diet resulted in greater values for maximum incremental insulin concentration and area under the incremental insulin curve than the lentil-based diet (P < 0.05). However, plasma insulin concentrations rose in relation to the basal values for cats fed corn, sorghum, pea, and brewers rice diets (P < 0.05). Variations in diet digestibility and postprandial response can be explained by differences in the chemical composition of the starch source, including fiber content and granule structure, and also differences in the chemical compositions of the diets. The data suggest that starch has less of an effect on the cat postprandial glucose and insulin responses than on those of dogs and humans. This can be explained by the metabolic peculiarities of felines, which may slow and prolong starch digestion and absorption, leading to the delayed, less pronounced effects on their blood responses.
Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care | 2010
Márcio Antonio Brunetto; Marcia de Oliveira Sampaio Gomes; Marco R. Andre; Eliana Teshima; Karina Nogueira Venturelli Gonçalves; Gener Tadeu Pereira; Antonio Sergio Ferraudo; Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi
OBJECTIVE Investigate the effects of assisted nutritional support on hospital outcome in dogs and cats, and the relationship between hospital outcome and energy intake, body condition score (BCS), physical status score, and type of nutritional support used. DESIGN Retrospective analysis of hospitalized animals. SETTING Teaching Veterinary Hospital. ANIMALS Four hundred and sixty-seven dogs and 55 cats. INTERVENTIONS Routine clinical nutritional support. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS The following variables were recorded for each animal: energy intake, body weight at admission and discharge, BCS, physical status score, and type of nutritional support used. Disease severity was negatively associated with hospital outcome and energy intake (P=0.009). Energy intake was positively associated with hospital discharge (P<0.001). Outcome may be related to BCS, with discharge rates of 73% for animals with low BCS, and 84.7% for those at an ideal BCS or overweight (P=0.04). Sixty-four percent of animals showed voluntary food intake (92.9% were discharged), 19.0% received enteral support (71.8% were discharged), 7.0% were forced fed (75.0% were discharged), 6.0% received parenteral support (61.9% were discharged), and 4.0% did not receive calories (38.4% were discharged), suggesting a possible relationship between the type of nutritional support, energy intake, and outcome (P=0.009). CONCLUSIONS Energy supply, even if modest and close to resting energy requirements appears to be positively associated with hospital discharge. However, disease severity was the main negative factor on outcome and also had a negative effect on energy intake, making it difficult to separate the effects of both factors when interpreting hospital discharge. Thin animals with low BCS had greater mortality.
Journal of Nutrition | 2009
Ricardo Souza Vasconcellos; Naida Cristina Borges; Karina Nogueira Venturelli Gonçalves; Júlio Carlos Canola; Francisco José Albuquerque de Paula; Euclides Braga Malheiros; Márcio Antonio Brunetto; Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi
The effects of 2 diets with different protein contents on weight loss and subsequent maintenance was assessed in obese cats. The control group [Co; n = 8; body condition score (BCS) = 8.6 +/- 0.2] received a diet containing 21.4 g crude protein (CP)/MJ of metabolizable energy and the high-protein group (HP; n = 7; BCS = 8.6 +/- 0.2) received a diet containing 28.4 g CP/MJ until the cats achieved a 20% controlled weight loss (0.92 +/- 0.2%/wk). After the weight loss, the cats were all fed a diet containing 28.0 g CP/MJ at an amount sufficient to maintain a constant body weight (MAIN) for 120 d. During weight loss, there was a reduction of lean mass in Co (P < 0.01) but not in HP cats and a reduction in leptinemia in both groups (P < 0.01). Energy intake per kilogram of metabolic weight (kg(-0.40)) to maintain the same rate of weight loss was lower (P < 0.04) in the Co (344 +/- 15.9 kJ x kg(-0.40) x d(-1)) than in the HP group (377 +/- 12.4 kJ. x kg(-0.40) x d(-1)). During the first 40 d of MAIN, the energy requirement for weight maintenance was 398.7 +/- 9.7 kJ.kg(-0.40) x d(-1) for both groups, corresponding to 73% of the NRC recommendation. The required energy gradually increased in both groups (P < 0.05) but at a faster rate in HP; therefore, the energy consumption during the last 40 d of the MAIN was higher (P < 0.001) for the HP cats (533.8 +/- 7.4 kJ x kg(-0.40) x d(-1)) than for the control cats (462.3 +/- 9.6 kJ x kg(-0.40) x d(-1)). These findings suggest that HP diets allow a higher energy intake to weight loss in cats, reducing the intensity of energy restriction. Protein intake also seemed to have long-term effects so that weight maintenance required more energy after weight loss.
Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition | 2010
Eliana Teshima; Márcio Antonio Brunetto; Ricardo Souza Vasconcellos; Karina Nogueira Venturelli Gonçalves; L. D. de-Oliveira; Ana Gabriela Valério; Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi
Availability of nutrients is influenced by extremes of age, and a better characterization of this influence is necessary for appropriate development of foods and nutritional management throughout life stages of cats. This study investigated nutrient digestibility, mineral absorption, faeces and urine production in three groups of six young, mature and old cats fed two diets containing different energy densities. Apparent digestibility and mineral absorption were calculated by total collection method and values were tested with anova and regression analysis. A quadratic relationship was detected between age and digestibility of dry matter, organic matter, crude protein, acid-hydrolysed fat and starch in the low-energy diet. Starch digestibility showed the same response in the high-energy diet. Young adult cats had intermediate digestibility, mature cats the highest and old cats the lowest. Mineral absorption (calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, sodium, potassium and chloride) and urinary pH were not different among groups. These findings confirm previous studies that found low digestibility of nutrients in some old cats, and support evidence that this trend is even more important in less digestible dry foods. On the contrary, data suggest that mineral formulations do not need to be varied in diets for adult cats of different ages.
Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition | 2012
L. D. de-Oliveira; F. S. Takakura; Ellen Kienzle; Márcio Antonio Brunetto; Eliana Teshima; Gener Tadeu Pereira; Ricardo Souza Vasconcellos; Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi
Six dry dog foods and six dry cat foods with different carbohydrate sources were investigated in digestion trials. Food and faecal samples were analysed for CF, TDF and starch. In dogs, also neutral detergent fibre (aNDFom) and acid detergent fibre (ADFom) were analysed. N-free extract (NfE) was calculated for CF, and similarly for all other fibre analyses. Linear regressions were calculated between fibre intake and faecal fibre excretion. True digestibility was calculated from the regression coefficients [true digestibility in % = (1 - regression coefficient)*100], with the intercept of the equation representing excretion of material of non-food origin. Crude fibre analyses gave the lowest values, and TDF the highest, while ADFom and aNDFom were in between. Variation between diets was lowest in CF and highest in TDF. Total dietary fibre, aNDFom and ADFom in food were positively correlated. Crude fibre in food did not correlate with any other method. The NfE analogue for TDF was closest to the starch content. Methods of fibre analyses in faeces did not agree very well with each other. Crude fibre had the lowest apparent digestibility, followed by ADFom, TDF and aNDFom. For all fibre analyses, there was a significant correlation between fibre intake and faecal fibre excretion. True digestibility was close to zero for CF, with a high uniformity in both species. In dogs, true digestibility of aNDFom was 53%, of ADFom 26% and of TDF 37%; in cats, true digestibility of TDF was 31%. Except for CF, the intercept of the regression equations suggest that faecal excretion of some material of non-food origin is analysed as fibre. A combination of TDF and CF analyses might give good information on the content of total (TDF), unfermentable (CF) and partially fermentable fibre (TDF-CF) in pet foods.
Revista Brasileira De Zootecnia | 2006
Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi; Roberto Pontieri; Cristiana Fonseca Ferreira; Flávio Prada
The coefficient of apparent digestibility (CAD) of four dry extruded dog foods was compared, each one formulated with a different protein source: soybean meal (SM), corn gluten meal (GM), meat and bone meal (MBM) and poultry meal (PM). A completely randomized design was used, with four treatments (protein source) and six repetitions per treatment, in a total of 24 animals. Tukey test was used to compare treatments means. The diet based on GM showed the highest CAD of crude protein (88.13±0.40%), followed by SM (86.31±0.34%), MBM (85.88±0.16%), and PM (83.69±0.09%), with the lowest results. The CAD of dry matter was highest for PM (83.69±0.09%), intermediary for GM (82.41±0.23%) and MBM (82.76±0.11%), and lowest for SM (81.10±0.16%) The rations based on animal protein presented the highest CAD of nitrogen-free extract. The dogs fecal dry matter was higher for MBM, intermediary for PM and GM, and lower for SM. All the four protein sources analyzed have shown good CAD, and can be used in dog diets.
Revista Brasileira De Zootecnia | 2007
Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi
Durante o processo de assimilacao e uso dos alimentos, diferentes respostas metabolicas podem ser desenvolvidas pelo organismo dos animais. Estas respostas sao fruto da integracao de mecanismos complexos, que envolvem os sistemas neuro-endocrino e o funcionamento dos orgaos, sendo influenciadas pela dieta, especie animal, idade, condicao fisiologica e composicao corporal. Este trabalho enfoca a importância fisiologica e os metodos de estudo das respostas pos-prandiais aos carboidratos, bem como as alteracoes fisiologicas consequentes ao balanco eletrolitico da dieta. A quantidade, estrutura quimica e processamento industrial do amido determinam boa parte da resposta pos-prandial de glicose e insulina de caes. Em gatos, outros mecanismos parecem ser mais importantes, como a ingestao de aminoacidos. A fibra alimentar tambem altera a resposta pos-prandial ao alimento, devendo ser consideradas sua quantidade, solubilidade e fermentabilidade no desenvolvimento das dietas. Os metodos de estudo destas respostas incluem avaliacao das respostas glicemica e insulinca pos-prandiais, teste endovenoso de tolerância a glicose e a arginina. O clâmp euglicemico apresenta-se tambem como ferramenta de estudo, no entanto revela informacoes mais relacionadas ao animal do que a dieta. A compreensao do conjunto de alteracoes metabolicas aos carboidratos e importante no estudo do controle da saciedade, composicao corporal e inumeras doencas degenerativas e endocrinas. A concentracao e relacao entre os macro-elementos da dieta (Na, Cl, K, P, Ca, Mg e S) e dos aminoacidos sulfurados (metionina, cistina e taurina) interferem em inumeras funcoes orgânicas, como a cardiovascular, neuromuscular, metabolismo osseo, renal e pulmonar, refletindo-se no equilibrio hidro-eletrolitico e acido-basico orgânicos. De importância pratica para caes e gatos encontram-se a relacao destes nutrientes com cardiopatias, nefropatias, osteodistrofias e urolitiases. A relacao entre os macro-elementos e estabelecida em mmol/kg de materia seca da dieta, calculando-se seu balanco cation-ânion (excesso de bases ou ânions dieteticos nao determinados). Suas repostas orgânicas sao medidas, dentre outros metodos, pela hemogasimetria, balanco hidrico, mensuracao do volume dos espacos extracelular e vascular, supersaturacao e pH urinarios.
Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition | 2013
Fabiano César Sá; R. S. Vasconcellos; M. A. Brunetto; F. O. R. Filho; Marcia de Oliveira Sampaio Gomes; Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi
Recently, there is an interest in technologies that favour the use of coproducts for animal nutrition. The effect of adding two enzyme mixtures in diets for dogs formulated with wheat bran (WB) was evaluated. Two foods with similar compositions were formulated: negative control (NC; without WB) and test diet (25% of WB). The test diet was divided into four treatments: without enzyme (positive control), enzyme mixture 1 (ENZ1; added before extrusion β-glucanase, xylanase, cellulase, glucoamylase, phytase); enzyme mixture 2 (ENZ2; added before extrusion the ENZ1 more α-amylase); enzyme mixture 2 added after the extrusion (ENZ2ex). ENZ1 and ENZ2 were used to evaluate the enzyme effect on extruder pre-conditioner (processing additive) and ENZ2ex to evaluate the effect of enzyme supplementation for the animal. Digestibility was measured through total collection of faeces and urine. The experiment followed a randomized block design with five treatments (diets) and six dogs per diet, totalling 30 dogs (7.0 ± 1.2 years old and 11.0 ± 2.2 kg of body weight). Data were submitted to analysis of variance and means compared by Tukeys test and orthogonal contrasts (p < 0.05). Reducing sugars showed an important reduction after extrusion, suggesting the formation of carbohydrate complexes. The apparent total tract digestibility (ATTD) of dry matter, organic matter, crude protein, acid-hydrolysed fat and energy was higher in NC than in diets with WB (p < 0.001), without effects of enzyme additions. WB diets resulted in higher faecal production and concentration of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) and reduced pH and ammonia concentration (p < 0.01), with no effect of enzyme addition. The enzyme addition did not result in improved digestibility of a diet high in non-starch polysaccharides; however, only ATTD was measured and nutrient fermentation in the large intestine may have interfered with the results obtained. WB modified fermentation product formation in the colon of dogs.
Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia | 2008
G. Q. Mostachio; L. D. de-Oliveira; Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi; Wilter Ricardo Russiano Vicente
OBJECTIVE To examine the anesthetic effects of a xylazine-diazepam-ketamine (XDK) combination in roosters. STUDY DESIGN Prospective experimental trial. ANIMALS Six healthy white Leghorn roosters weighing 2.03 +/- 0.08 kg. METHODS Each rooster was pre-medicated with xylazine (3 mg kg(-1), IM) and after 15 minutes anesthesia was induced with a diazepam (4 mg kg(-1)) and ketamine (25 mg kg(-1)) combination injected into the pectoral muscles. Heart and respiratory rates were recorded before anesthesia and every 15 minutes after induction for 165 minutes. Cloacal temperature was measured before and 15 minutes after pre-medication and every 75 minutes thereafter during anesthesia. Quality of induction and recovery were scored subjectively; duration of loss of righting reflex, abolition of response to a painful stimulus and palpebral reflex were also recorded. RESULTS Intramuscular injection of xylazine smoothly induced loss of the righting reflex within 3-4 minutes. Loss of response to a painful stimulus occurred at 13.1 +/- 2.9 minutes (mean +/- SD) after the administration of the D-K combination, and lasted for 63.0 +/- 5.3 minutes. Roosters anesthetized with this combination had a significant decrease in heart and respiratory rates and cloacal temperature. The recovery period lasted for up to 4 hours (227.5 +/- 15.4 minutes). Quality of recovery was satisfactory for four roosters but excitation was noted in two birds. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE The XDK combination was a useful anesthetic technique for typhlectomy in roosters. Nevertheless this drug combination should be used with caution and cardiopulmonary parameters monitored carefully. Under the conditions of this experiment it was associated with a decreased cloacal temperature and prolonged recoveries.
British Journal of Nutrition | 2011
Marcia de Oliveira Sampaio Gomes; Mariana Casteleti Beraldo; Thaila Cristina Putarov; Márcio Antonio Brunetto; Leandro Zaine; Maria Beatriz Abreu Glória; Aulus Cavalieri Carciofi
The effects of age on microbiota composition, gut fermentation end-product formation and peripheral lymphocyte numbers were compared between old and young adult Beagle dogs fed four kibble diets differing in yeast cell wall contents. The experiment had a double 4 × 4 Latin square design, one with four mature dogs (4 years old) and the other with four old dogs (10 years old), with four replicates (diets) per dog. In each period a 15 d adaptation period preceded a 5 d total collection of faeces for the digestibility trial. On day 21, fresh faecal samples were collected for the determination of bacterial enumeration, pH, biogenic amine and short-chain fatty acid. Flow cytometry was used for immunophenotypic evaluation. Dogs were fed four kibble diets with similar composition with 0, 0.15, 0.30 and 0.45 % of yeast cell wall (as-fed), respectively. Data were evaluated using general linear models of Statistical Analysis Systems statistical software (P < 0.05). No evidence of a difference in faecal bacteria counts between ages was found (total aerobes, total anaerobes, Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus, Clostridium and Escherichia coli: P>0.15). Faecal concentrations of butyrate, histamine, agmatine and spermine were lower (P ≤ 0.05) and faecal pH was higher (P = 0.03) in older dogs than in mature adult dogs, suggesting an alteration in bacterial metabolic activity, or in the rate of intestinal absorption of these compounds. Concentrations of T-lymphocytes, T-cytotoxic lymphocytes and B-lymphocytes were also lower (P ≤ 0.01) in older dogs than in mature adult dogs. The study confirmed alterations in peripheral lymphocytes and revealed a reduced concentration of some fermentation end products in the colon of old dogs.