Scientists link enzyme level to broiler muscle disease
Story Date: 11/11/2013

 

Source: Michael Fielding, MEATINGPLACE, 11/8/13

After more than a decade of research into an increasingly common and costly broiler condition known as green muscle disease, poultry scientists at Auburn University have identified a blood enzyme that may provide breeders a noninvasive tool to screen birds for susceptibility to the disease.


The enzyme is creatine kinase, or CK, elevated levels of which signal muscle breakdown and damage. In humans, high CK levels in the blood can be indicators of heart attack, muscular dystrophy, acute renal failure and other serious muscle conditions. In broilers, they indicate the development of green muscle disease.


Green muscle disease—technically called deep pectoral myopathy—is a degenerative condition of broilers chickens’ minor pectoral muscles, or tenders, that causes the muscle tissue to bruise. The discolored tissue is not discovered until processing, at which point it must be trimmed and discarded, costing the U.S. poultry industry an estimated $50 million a year in losses.


Auburn poultry science professor Joe Hess—who, with departmental colleagues Sarge Bilgili and Roger Lien, has conducted extensive research on the disease—says the condition is caused by sudden, excessive wing flapping, especially when that occurs one to two days before slaughter.


“Green muscle disease is an exercise issue,” Hess said in a news release. “If you have a house full of chickens and there’s a sudden loud noise or some other environmental stressor, they’re going to get scared and agitated and start flapping their wings. If it’s late in the growing season, that’s when the damage occurs.”


During wing movement, blood flow increases to a bird’s major and minor pectorals, or breast muscles, causing the tissues to swell. Though the swelling doesn’t affect the larger breast fillet muscle, the tender has a more rigid covering and is confined to a tighter space, and the swelling compresses the muscle so much that the blood supply is cut off.


Early in the team’s green muscle research, Lien perfected a technique, “encouraged wing flapping,” to assess birds’ susceptibility to the condition and determine factors that contribute to development. Using that procedure, the scientists have found that broiler strains bred for higher breast-meat yields are more likely to develop the disease, as are broilers marketed at heavier weights and, to a degree, male birds.
They also found correlations between temperature and disease incidence.


“When the weather’s hot, broilers grow at a lot slower rate than in cooler weather,” Hess said. “But cool to normal temperatures are periods of rapid growth, and broilers that get agitated during those periods have a greater likelihood of muscle damage.”


In their latest focus on the relationship between creatine kinase levels and deep pectoral myopathy, the Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station scientists induced excessive wing activity and then measured CK levels one to four days after the trials. At processing, they discovered that broilers in which levels of the enzyme had jumped significantly post-flapping were far more likely to have muscle damage to the minor pectorals, leading them to conclude that encouraged wing flapping and creatine kinase levels could be used as tools in genetic selection programs to screen for green muscle disease susceptibility.


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