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Technical note: Alternatives to reduce adipose tissue sampling bias.

Authors :
Cruz, G. D.
Wang, Y.
Fadel, J. G.
Source :
Journal of Animal Science. Oct2014, Vol. 92 Issue 10, p4761-4766. 6p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Understanding the mechanisms by which nutritional and pharmaceutical factors can manipulate adipose tissue growth and development in production animals has direct and indirect effects in the profitability of an enterprise. Adipocyte cellularity (number and size) is a key biological response that is commonly measured in animal science research. The variability and sampling of adipocyte cellularity within a muscle has been addressed in previous studies, but no attempt to critically investigate these issues has been proposed in the literature. The present study evaluated 2 sampling techniques (random and systematic) in an attempt to minimize sampling bias and to determine the minimum number of samples from 1 to 15 needed to represent the overall adipose tissue in the muscle. Both sampling procedures were applied on adipose tissue samples dissected from 30 longissimus muscles from cattle finished either on grass or grain. Briefly, adipose tissue samples were fixed with osmium tetroxide, and size and number of adipocytes were determined by a Coulter Counter. These results were then fit in a finite mixture model to obtain distribution parameters of each sample. To evaluate the benefits of increasing number of samples and the advantage of the new sampling technique, the concept of acceptance ratio was used; simply stated, the higher the acceptance ratio, the better the representation of the overall population. As expected, a great improvement on the estimation of the overall adipocyte cellularity parameters was observed using both sampling techniques when sample size number increased from 1 to 15 samples, considering both techniques' acceptance ratio increased from approximately 3 to 25%. When comparing sampling techniques, the systematic procedure slightly improved parameters estimation. The results suggest that more detailed research using other sampling techniques may provide better estimates for minimum sampling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00218812
Volume :
92
Issue :
10
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Animal Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
99069783
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2527/jas.2014-8180