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Gonadorelin

GnRH, Luteinizing Hormone-Releasing Hormone, LHRH, Factrel

Quick Stats
Studies 192
Trials 100
2025 pubmed 1 citations

Carcass Traits and Meat Quality of Surgically Castrated and Immunocastrated Pigs at Two Slaughter Weights.

Zhdanov. Dmytro V DV; Mykhalko. Oleksandr H OH; Povod. Mykola H MH; Zamaratskaia. Galia G

Key Findings

  • Surgically castrated males had the thickest backfat and highest overall fat content, especially at the heavier weight.
  • Immunocastrated pigs showed intermediate fat levels—less than surgical castration but more than females.
  • Meat quality traits (pH, colour, marbling, water‑holding capacity) varied slightly with castration method, sex, and weight, but overall differences were modest.

Practical Outcomes

  • For people interested in human health or self‑experimentation, this research offers little direct guidance. It shows that blocking GnRH with a vaccine works in pigs to reduce excess fat compared to surgical castration, but the findings are specific to animal production and not applicable to human protocols.

Summary

The study compared two ways of stopping male pigs from producing sex hormones—cutting their testicles (surgical castration) versus giving them a vaccine that blocks the hormone‑releasing signal (immunocastration). It looked at how each method affected meat quality and body fat at two different slaughter weights, and also included female pigs for comparison.

Abstract

Surgical castration of male piglets is a common practice to prevent boar taint and reduce aggressive behaviour. However, it raises welfare concerns and alters carcass fat deposition. Immunocastration, a vaccine-based alternative targeting gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), mitigates these welfare issues. This study evaluated carcass traits and meat quality in surgically and immunocastrated pigs slaughtered at two weight classes (approximately 116 kg and 136 kg). We compared growth performance, carcass composition, fat quality, and key meat quality indicators among surgically castrated males, immunocastrated males, and immunocastrated females. Inclusion of uncastrated and immunocastrated females provides novel comparative data for mixed-sex production systems, where such information is scarce. This broader evaluation helps fill current gaps in knowledge about immunocastration effects in female pigs. Surgically castrated males showed higher backfat thickness and fat content, particularly at the heavier weight, while immunocastrated pigs exhibited intermediate traits. Ultimate pH, colour, marbling, water-holding capacity, and moisture loss varied with castration method, sex, and slaughter weight, though many differences were subtle. The findings confirm that immunocastration offers a favourable balance between animal welfare and production traits, producing pork quality comparable to surgical castration. These results provide valuable insights for optimizing pork production systems, balancing welfare, efficiency, and meat quality.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-09-29T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.3390/ani15192846

Citations

1

References

50