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Anticoccidial Activity of Berberine against Eimeria-Infected Chickens

The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2021;59(4):403-408.
Published online: August 18, 2021

College of Veterinary Medicine & Institute of Animal Medicine, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju 52828, Korea

*Corresponding author (wongimin@gnu.ac.kr)
• Received: May 29, 2021   • Revised: July 28, 2021   • Accepted: July 30, 2021

© 2021, Korean Society for Parasitology and Tropical Medicine

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Anticoccidial Activity of Berberine against Eimeria-Infected Chickens
Korean J Parasitol. 2021;59(4):403-408.   Published online August 18, 2021
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Korean J Parasitol. 2021;59(4):403-408.   Published online August 18, 2021
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Anticoccidial Activity of Berberine against Eimeria-Infected Chickens
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Fig. 1 Effect of berberine on oocyst shedding and sporulation. Twelve-day-old male chickens were inoculated orally with 1×104 sporulated oocysts of E. tenella and fed a standard diet supplemented with powdered berberine (0.05, 0.1, 0.2, or 0.3%) beginning 2 days prior to infection. (A) Fecal oocyst shedding to berberine treatment (n=48/group). Fecal materials were collected on days 6 to 9 post-infection and oocyst numbers were assessed. Data represent the mean±SE from 4 replicates, with 12 chickens in each replicate and one representative of 2 independent experiments. Control indicates uninfected, untreated healthy controls. ***P<0.001 compared to untreated and infected group. BBR, berberine. (B) Fecal materials were incubated at 28°C for 2 days for sporulation. Sporulated oocysts were enumerated using a McMaster counting chamber. Data represent the mean±SE from 3 replicates and one representative of 2 independent experiments.
Fig. 2 Fecal oocyst shedding following berberine-based diets in chickens infected with Eimeria species. One week-old male chickens (n=28/group) were inoculated orally with 1×104 sporulated E. acervulina, E. tenella, E. mitis, E. praecox, or E. maxima oocysts and fed a standard diet supplemented with powdered berberine (0.2 or 0.5%) beginning 2 days prior to infection. Fecal oocysts were collected from 6 to 9 days post-infection and oocyst numbers were assessed. Data represent the mean±SE from 2 replicates, with 14 chickens in each replicate and one representative of 2 independent experiments. ***P<0.001 compared to untreated and infected group. BBR, berberine.
Anticoccidial Activity of Berberine against Eimeria-Infected Chickens

Effect of berberine treatment on body weight gain compared to untreated chickens

Period of berberine treatment Concentrations of berberine
Control 0.1% 0.2% 0.5%
2 days 100±9.7 ND 108.4±12.1** 68.5±10.4***
6 days 100±22.6 103±21.8 98.3±22.2 55±12.2***

The body weight of ROSS308 male chickens (n=30/group) was measured on days 2 and 6 after initiation of feed supplemented with berberine. Body weight gains are expressed as the percentage of weight of the control chickens. Control chickens were fed the standard diet without berberine treatment. ND, not determined.

**P<0.01,

***P<0.001 compared to control group.

Table 1 Effect of berberine treatment on body weight gain compared to untreated chickens

The body weight of ROSS308 male chickens (n=30/group) was measured on days 2 and 6 after initiation of feed supplemented with berberine. Body weight gains are expressed as the percentage of weight of the control chickens. Control chickens were fed the standard diet without berberine treatment. ND, not determined.

P<0.01,

P<0.001 compared to control group.