Food or edible material: processes – compositions – and products – Treatment of live animal
Reexamination Certificate
2000-05-23
2002-03-12
Sayala, Chhaya D. (Department: 1761)
Food or edible material: processes, compositions, and products
Treatment of live animal
C426S807000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06355281
ABSTRACT:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims priority to Italian Application Serial No. M199A001160 filed May 25, 1999, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a microgranule for animal feeding, adapted for adding calcium salts to fodders.
In particular, the present invention relates to a calcium salt supplement in microgranule form which can be easily added to conventional animal fodders.
Commonly commercially available fodders for feeding animals have balanced formulae, in which nutrients are associated with inorganic compounds, such as minerals, oligoelements and saline compounds.
Currently, the presence of inorganic saline components in fodders is considered very important in order to provide a formula for animal feeding which is balanced and complete in all the components that are essential for body health and development.
It has in fact been noted that the lack of one or more mineral salts which are physiologically present in the animal body can cause metabolic disorders and compromise or slow the growth of the animal.
It is also known that minerals are involved in a considerable number of biochemical reactions, ranging from the enzyme and hormone activity regulation to the oxidation-reduction reactions, and to the stabilization of balances in acid-base hematic ratios.
In particular it has been noted that in certain stages of the production cycle or of the body growth of the animal there is a higher demand for minerals and oligoelements in order to maintain the homeostatic balance and the anion/cation hematic ratio within physiological ranges.
By way of example, the following situations are noted:
the laying hen during shell production;
milk-producing cattle and sows about to give birth, in order to allow good contraction of smooth muscles in order to avoid hypocalcemia;
pigs and chickens during growth.
In particular, there are certain minerals, such as calcium, sulfur, magnesium and sodium which, in salified form as carbonates, sulfates or chlorides, have a fundamental role, both from the plastic point of view, owing to their ability to fix to the bones of the skeleton and to the teeth, and from the homeostatic point of view, owing to their ability to regulate the acid-base balance of the blood.
It is well-known that lack of one or more of these elements can lead to physical disorders, including milk fever, mastitis, cystitis, formation of kidney stones, digestion disorders and hypocalcemia.
It is well-known that considerable importance is given to the administration of the calcium ion in the most recent intensive and semi-intensive animal rearing techniques. The most recent formulae of animal fodders in fact include variable quantities in terms of calcium salts, generally in the form of calcium chloride.
The importance of the presence of this macroelement in a proper diet has been accepted so favorably by the scientific community that currently applicable statutory provisions on animal nutrition mandate its presence in formulae for animal feeding.
However, it has been noted that the addition of calcium chloride to animal fodders leads to drawbacks in use, including poor stability thereof due to humidity and the introduction of a string bitter taste in the formula, which makes the fodder scarcely palatable for animals.
It has also been noted that the high hygroscopicity of calcium chloride can trigger fermentation processes within the fodder, with a consequent deterioration of the fodder from the nutritional point of view. Moreover, the presence of moisture in the calcium chloride often compromises the operations for mixing the various components of fodders.
Moreover, it has been noted that adding calcium chloride to ordinary fodders leads to a reduction in the amount of fodder ingested per day. This fact has been assessed very negatively by experts in the field because it causes not only the onset of possible metabolic deficiencies but also a general reduction in body mass and a slower growth of the farm animal.
In an attempt to avoid these drawbacks, fodder producers have endeavored to produce alternative saline supplements, but such supplements have been found to be unsuitable for ensuring that the daily requirement of Ca
++
ions is met.
Moreover, it has been noted that a shortage of calcium ions in the diet can cause a deficit in the operation of the immune system of such an extent so as to expose the animal to microbial or viral infections.
It has also been verified that the addition of calcium salts, as calcium carbonate to fodders, in certain periods of rearing, such as during the weaning of piglets, can even be a negative factor due to the excessive buffer activity of the salt which alters the acid-base blood balance.
Preparations based on calcium chloride in emulsion or gel form, adapted for forced oral administration to the individual animal and only for short periods, are currently commercially available. However, such preparations are not used in the production of fodders because they are not recommended for wide-scale use in farms.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The aim of the present invention is to avoid, or substantially lessen, the drawbacks noted in the use of calcium salts, with particular reference to calcium chloride, in animal feeding.
An object of the present invention is to provide a microgranule for animal feeding, particularly suitable for adding calcium chloride to fodders, whose taste is acceptable for animals and which can be mixed with the conventional fodders.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a microgranule for animal feeding, which includes a calcium salt with reduced hygroscopicity and can be easily added to formulae for feeding animals.
Another object of the invention is to provide a granular additive based on calcium chloride whose shape and dimensions are such that it can be used in industrial fodder production lines.
These and other objects which will become better apparent hereinafter are achieved, according to a first aspect of the present invention, by a microgranule for animal feeding, particularly suitable for adding calcium salts to fodders, characterized in that it comprises a calcium salt which is encapsulated in a protective matrix comprising a fatty acid, which is either in free form or esterified with glycerol.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, said calcium salt is constituted by calcium chloride.
Within the scope of the present invention, the term “high fatty acid” designates a fatty acid whose number of carbon atoms is higher than 6, and which, preferably, has a carbon atom content within the range between C
8
and C
18
.
By way of example, it is possible to use saturated fatty acids such as caprilic, lauric, myristic and palmitic acids, either alone or in a mixture, or even in association with small quantities of unsaturated fatty acids such as for example oleic acid and linoleic acid. These acids can be esterified with glycerol, so as to constitute glycerides or glyceryl trialkanoates, such as for example glyceryl tristearate. The fatty acids used are generally in solid form at room temperature.
Conveniently, a mixture of fatty acids is used which produces a melting point of the protective matrix in the range between 30 and 80° C.
These fatty acids form a protective matrix or film around the saline crystal core which is preferably constituted by 0-30% by weight of a mixture of C
8
to C
14
fatty acids and by 70-100% by weight of C
6
to C
18
fatty acids.
In the microgranule according to the invention, the components are distributed on two layers: an internal one, constituted by the crystalline component (calcium chloride), and an external one, constituted by the protective film or matrix of fatty acid, either free or esterified with glycerol.
The protective matrix forms a waterproof film which prevents the absorption by the calcium salt of the water that is present in the atmosphere or in the surrounding environmen
Arduini Lauro
Cerchiari Emilio
S.A.M. Soda
Sayala Chhaya D.
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