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. 2018 Jun 15;96(9):3748–3756. doi: 10.1093/jas/sky243

Table 1.

Nutritional treatments that stimulated mammary development (in terms of mass of parenchymal tissue or amount of parenchymal DNA) in pigs

Treatment Period1 Effect on parenchyma References
10% flaxseed In utero (day 63 gestation to end lactation) 31% ⬆ parenchymal weight Farmer et al. (2007)
2.3 g/d of genistein 90 to 183 d 44% ⬆ total DNA Farmer et al. (2010)
Ad libitum feeding vs. 25% feed restriction 90 d to puberty 46% ⬆ parenchymal weight Sorensen et al. (2002b)
Ad libitum feeding vs. 20% feed restriction 90 d to puberty 36% ⬆ parenchymal weight Farmer et al. (2004)
Ad libitum feeding vs. 33% feed restriction 90 d to 5.5 mo 52% ⬆ parenchymal weight
28% ⬆ total DNA
Sorensen et al. (2006)
24- vs. 36-mm BF2 at the end of gestation via changes in energy and protein intakes Gestation Approximately 240%⬆DNA concentrations Head and Williams (1991)
21- to 26- or 17- to 19-mm BF vs. 12- to 15-mm BF at the end of gestation via changes in feed intake Gestation Average of 33% ⬆ parenchymal weight Farmer et al. (2016a)
5.76 vs. 10.5 Mcal ME/d Day 75 to end of gestation 27% ⬆ parenchymal weight Weldon et al. (1991)
Domperidone (0.4 mg /kg BW) Days 90 to 110 of gestation3 80% ⬆ in lumen diameter of mammary epithelial cells VanKlompenberg et al. (2013)
17.5 vs. 12 Mcal ME/d Lactation ⬆ parenchymal weight4 Kim et al. (1999b)
65 vs. 32 g lysine/d Lactation ⬆ parenchymal weight4 Kim et al. (1999b)

1Period where treatment was imposed.

2BF = backfat.

3Mammary development was not measured, but there was an increase in mammary epithelial cell differentiation.

4Percent increase could not be determined from the published data.