@article { , title = {Dietary vitamin D improves performance and bone mineralisation, but increases parasite replication and compromises gut health in Eimeria infected broilers}, abstract = {Coccidial infections may reduce fat soluble vitamin status and bone mineralisation in broiler chickens. We hypothesised that broilers infected with Eimeria maxima would benefit from increased dietary supplementation with vitamin D (vitD) or with 25-OH-D3 (25D3). Male Ross 308 chickens were assigned to diets with low (L) or commercial (M) vitD levels (1000 vs 4000 IU/kg) supplemented as D3 or 25D3. At d11 of age birds were inoculated with water (C) or 7000 E. maxima oocysts (I). Pen performance was calculated over the early (d1 - 6), acute (d7 - 10) and recovery periods (d11 - 14) post-infection (pi). At the end of each period 6 birds per treatment were dissected to assess long bone mineralisation, plasma levels of 25D3, calcium and phosphorus, and intestinal histomorphometry. Parasite replication and transcription of cytokines IL-10 and IFN-γ were assessed at d6 pi using quantitative PCR. Performance, bone mineralisation and plasma 25D3 levels were significantly reduced during infection (P < 0.05). M diets or diets with 25D3 raised plasma 25D3, improved performance and aspects of mineralisation (P < 0.05). Offering L diets compromised feed efficiency pi, reduced femur breaking strength and plasma phosphorous levels at d10 pi in I birds (P < 0.05). Contrastingly, offering M diets or diets with 25D3 resulted in higher parasite loads (P < 0.001) and reduced jejunal villi length at d10 pi (P < 0.01), with no effect on IL-10 or IFN-γ transcription. Diets with 4000 IU/kg vitD content or with 25D3 improved performance and mineralisation, irrespective of infection status, whilst 4000 IU/kg levels of vitD further improved feed efficiency and mineralisation in the presence of a coccidial infection.}, doi = {10.1017/S0007114519001375}, issn = {0007-1145}, journal = {BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION}, publicationstatus = {Published}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, url = {https://rvc-repository.worktribe.com/output/1382071}, keyword = {Integrated Research into Livestock and Food Systems, ePrints migration}, author = {Sakkas, P and Oikeh, I and Blake, D P and Smith, S and Kyriazakis, I} }