thesis
Immunomodulating Lactobacilli in Chicken
- Publication date
- 30 June 2004
- Publisher
- __Abstract__
The gastro-intestinal (GI) tract of a chicken starts with the beak, followed by the
esophagus and crop, proventriculus (glandular stomach), gizzard (muscular
stomach), duodenum, ileum, a pair of blind elongated caeca, colon and ending in
the cloaca. The GI-tract consists of a large, single cell layer of epithelial cells
surface and a complex microflora that symbiotically interacts with the host. The
surface is enlarged by the folds in the mucosal surface which are covered with villi,
which in turn are covered by microvilli. For humans the surface of the skin is about 2
m2, while the gut surface is 150-200m2 (about the size of a tennis court). For
chickens, these numbers are not available, but the ratio probably is also 100 times
the skin surface. Villi are present throughout the small and large intestine. They are
longest in the duodenum, but gradually shorten and thicken towards the colon. In
the first part of the cloaca they are stumpy and rounded. Villi are present in the
caeca also, becoming flattened toward the blind end.