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Effects of ketosis in dairy cows on blood biochemical parameters, milk yield and composition, and digestive capacity
2019
Yang, Wei | Zhang, Bingbing | Xu, Chuang | Zhang, Hongyou | Xia, Cheng
This study aimed to characterise the effects of ketosis on milk yield and composition and digestive capacity in transition dairy cows. Seven ketotic and seven healthy cows were housed in individual stalls for six days. Samples of plasma, milk, refused total mixed ration, and faeces were collected, and the blood biochemical parameters, milk yield and composition, dry matter intake, and faecal dry matter (FDM) production were determined. Compared with healthy cows, the ketotic cows had significantly higher concentrations of milk fat and citrate, but lower levels of milk protein and lactose. The cows exhibited a need for acid detergent fibre in forage and better digestion of neutral detergent fibre, starch, crude protein, and phosphorus than healthy cows, but more fat and gross energy were excreted in their faeces. Ketotic cows had higher energy-corrected milk yields and lower FDM than healthy cows. Lower feed intake coinciding with the requirement to maintain high milk production is considered to be the cause of ketosis in dairy cows. Ketotic cows exhibited lower dry matter fat digestion.
Show more [+] Less [-]Relationship between the content of chlorinated hydrocarbons and fatty acid composition of milk fat
2018
Pietrzak-Fiećko, Renata
Reports that the presence of persistent organic pollutants in fat may affect fatty acid metabolism prompted this research aiming to study the relationship between the contents of γ-HCH and DDT, DDE, DDD, and ΣDDT, and fatty acid composition of milk fat. The material consisted of 50 samples of cow and mare milk, collected in 2015. Ludwicki’s and the Röse-Gottlieb and IDF Standard methods were used to prepare the samples. Statistical analyses were conducted using Statistica 12.0. There was a negative correlation between the content of γ-HCH and C16:1, C17:1, C18:1c9, C18:1c9c12, and ΣMUFA in cow milk fat and C13:0, C14:0, and C10:1 in mare milk fat. A positive correlation was observed between γ-HCH and C6:0 to C12:0, C14:0, C18:1t16, and ΣSFA in cow milk fat, and between this compound and C14:0iso, C16:1, C17:1, C18:1c9,11, and ΣMUFA in mare milk fat. A negative correlation between the contents of ΣDDT and C16:1, C17:1, C18:1c9,11,13 and ΣMUFA in cow milk fat and C16:0iso, C17:0, and C18:3 in mare milk fat was noted. A positive correlation was found between the contents of ΣDDT and saturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids and ΣSFA and ΣPUFA in cow milk fat, and C18:2c9c12 in mare milk fat. The correlation between the content of selected organochlorine compounds and the composition of fatty acids in cow and mare milk fat indicates the strong influence of these environmental pollutants on the nutritional value of milk fat.
Show more [+] Less [-]A meta-analysis review of the effects of recombinant bovine somatotropin. 1. Methodology and effects on production
2003
Dohoo, I.R. | Leslie, K. | DesCôteaux, L. | Fredeen, A. | Dowling, P. | Preston, A. | Shewfelt, W.
This manuscript presents the results of a review of the effects of recombinant bovine somatotropin (rBST) on milk production, milk composition, dry matter intake, and body condition score that was carried out by an expert panel established by the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association (CVMA). The panel was established by the CVMA in response to a request from Health Canada in 1998 and their report was made public in 1999. A series of meta-analyses was used to combine data on production and nutrition related parameters that were extracted from all randomized clinical trials, which had been published in peer-reviewed journals or which were provided by Health Canada, from the submission by Monsanto for registration of rBST in Canada. A companion paper will present the results of the effects of the drug on measures of health, reproductive performance, and culling parameters. Recombinant bovine somatotropin was found to increase milk production by 11.3% in primiparous cows and 15.6% in multiparous cows; although there was considerable variation from study to study. While some statistically significant effects on milk composition (% butterfat, protein, and lactose) were found, they were all very small. Treatment increased dry matter intake by an average 1.5 kg/day during the treatment period and dry matter intake remained elevated on into the first 60 days of the subsequent lactation. Despite the increase in dry matter intake, treated animals had lower body condition scores at the end of the treatment period, and the reduced scores persisted through until the start of the subsequent lactation.
Show more [+] Less [-]Nursing sickness in the mink — a metabolic mystery or a familiar foe
2003
Rouvinen-Watt, Kirsti
Nursing sickness, the largest single cause of mortality in adult female mink (Mustela vison), is an example of a metabolic disorder, which develops when the demands for lactation require extensive mobilization of body energy reserves. The condition is characterized by progressive weight loss, emaciation, and dehydration with high concentrations of glucose and insulin in the blood. Morbidity due to nursing sickness can be as high as 15% with mortality around 8%, but the incidence is known to vary from year to year. Stress has been shown to trigger the onset of the disease and old females and females with large litters are most often affected. Increasing demand for gluconeogenesis from amino acids due to heavy milk production may be a predisposing factor. Glucose metabolism is inextricably linked to that of protein and fats. In obesity (or lipodystrophy), the ability of adipose tissue to buffer the daily influx of nutrients is overwhelmed (or absent), interfering with insulin-mediated glucose disposal and leading to insulin resistance. Polyunsaturated fatty acids of the n-3 family play an important role in modulating insulin signalling and glucose uptake by peripheral tissue. The increasing demand on these fatty acids for milk fat synthesis towards late lactation may result in deficiency in the lactating female, thus impairing glucose disposal. It is suggested that the underlying cause of mink nursing sickness is the development of acquired insulin resistance with 3 contributing key elements: obesity (or lipodystrophy), n-3 fatty acid deficiency, and high protein oxidation rate. It is recommended that mink breeder females be kept in moderate body condition during fall and winter to avoid fattening or emaciation. A dietary n-3 fatty acid supplement during the lactation period may be beneficial for improved glycemic control. Lowering of dietary protein reduces (oxidative) stress and improves water balance in the nursing females and may, therefore, prevent the development and help in the management of nursing sickness. It is also surmised that other, thus far unexplained, metabolic disorders seen in male and female mink may be related to acquired insulin resistance.
Show more [+] Less [-]Factors affecting skim milk progesterone assay results
1992
Nachreiner, R.F. | Oschmann, S.J. | Edquist, L.E. | Richards, J.I.
Five studies were performed to determine factors affecting progesterone concentration in skim milk. Results of the first study indicated that progesterone concentration was higher in skim milk of samples kept 16 hours in an ice bath (0 C) than of those left at room temperature (21 C). In the second study, this temperature effect was found to be reversible, with skim milk progesterone concentration increasing when whole milk samples were cooled prior to centrifugation. In the third study, [3H]-labeled progesterone was used to determine the relationship between fat content of foremilk (the first milk obtained from the teats), midmilk (milk obtained through milking), and strippings (milk obtained immediately after milking machines have been removed) samples and temperature (4 C and 21 C) on the percentage of progesterone in the skim milk fraction. The relationship between percentage of butterfat and percentage of progesterone in skim milk was linear when the log of these variables was used for calculations. In the fourth study, assayable progesterone in the skim milk fraction of foremilk, midmilk, and strippings was affected by temperature. In the fifth study, a multiple-regression procedure was used to determine the amount of variation in percentage of radioactive progesterone in the skim milk fraction. Independent variables (whole milk butterfat and temperature of incubation [1, 3, 13, 22, 37, and 50 C]) and the natural log of each variable, were entered into a stepwise multiple-regression analysis. The log of the temperature and percentage of butterfat of whole milk at the time of centrifugation accounted for 89.2% (r2 = 0.892) of the variation in the log of the progesterone concentration in the skim milk fractions. The equation describing this relationship was: log percentage of progesterone in the skim milk fraction = 4.046 - 0.144 X (log of temperature of whole milk sample) - 0.688 X (log percentage of butterfat in whole milk sample). The loss of progesterone from skim milk fractions of warm whole milk samples is possibly a physical phenomenon dependent on the temperature of the sample and its percentage of butterfat. A nomograph was created to allow others to use these variables in making adjustments in progesterone concentrations.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of bovine mammary secretion during the early nonlactating period and antibiotics on polymorphonuclear neutrophil function and morphology
1990
Lintner, T.J. | Eberhart, R.J.
The effect Of bovine mammary secretion during the nonlactating period and of antibiotic preparations on bovine polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) phagocytic function and morphology were evaluated in a series of in vitro multifactorial experiments. Benzathine cloxacillin (CL), benzathine cephapirin (CE), sodium novobiocin (NO), and a combination of dihydrostreptomycin with procaine penicillin G (DP) were prepared in the presence and absence of a peanut oil aluminum monostearate vehicle. The PMN were isolated from bovine blood, and the effect of each antibiotic preparation on PMN function and morphology was evaluated in a buffer, fat, skim, and a combination of fat with skim from bovine mammary secretion during the nonlactating period. The fat and skim were diluted with buffer to approximate their concentration in mammary secretion. Phagocytic functions of PMN were monitored by fluorescent microscopy, which made it possible to estimate both ingestion and intracellular killing of bacteria by PMN. Changes in PMN morphology were monitored by transmission electron microscopy. The ability of PMN to ingest and kill Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 25923 was significantly decreased by fat, skim, CL, CE, NO, and DP. Effects of some antibiotics on ingestion and killing of bacteria by PMN were influenced by the addition of vehicle and by interactions with mammary secretion. Neutrophil morphology was altered by fat, skim, CL, CE, NO, and DP. The detrimental effects of CL, CE, NO, and DP on PMN morphology were influenced (some significantly) by the presence of vehicle and interactions with mammary secretion. There were significant correlations among secretion- and antibiotic-induced changes in PMN ingestion of bacteria, PMN killing of bacteria, and PMN morphology.
Show more [+] Less [-]Identification of Escherichia coli F4ac-binding proteins in porcine milk fat globule membrane
2015
Novaković, Predrag | Huang, Yanyun Y. | Lockerbie, Betty | Shahriar, Farshid | Kelly, John | Gordon, John R. | Middleton, Dorothy M. | Loewen, Matthew E. | Kidney, Beverly A. | Simko, Elemir
F4ac-positive enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) must attach to the intestinal mucosa to cause diarrhea in piglets. Prevention of bacterial attachment to the intestinal mucosa is the most effective defense against ETEC-induced diarrhea. Porcine milk fat globule membranes (MFGM) were shown to be able to inhibit attachment of ETEC to the intestinal brush border; however, the specific components of porcine MFGM that inhibited attachment of ETEC to enterocytes were not identified. Accordingly, the purpose of this study was to identify F4ac-binding MFGM proteins by overlay Western blot and affinity chromatography. The proteome of porcine MFGM was characterized and the following F4ac-binding proteins were detected by overlay Western blot and affinity chromatography: lactadherin, butyrophilin, adipophilin, acyl-CoA synthetase 3, and fatty acid-binding protein 3. The biological function of these proteins was not investigated but it is possible that their interaction with F4ac fimbria interferes with bacterial attachment and colonization.
Show more [+] Less [-]Изучение особенностей продуктивных и воспроизводительных качеств коров дойного стада черно-пестрой породы в условиях ЗАО Липовцы
2009
Kovalevskaya, T.Ya. | Zayats, O.V. | Kurtina, V.N., Vitebsk State Academy of Veterinary Medicine (Belarus)
Investigation of peculiar features of productive and reproductive qualities (milk producing ability; reproductive qualities; live weight at different ages) of milking cows of white-and-black breed was realized in the conditions of CJSC Lipovtsy of Vitebsk region of the Republic of Belarus. On the basis of obtained results there was calculated the selective differential of milk yield and butter-fat yielding capacity which were increased by means of maternal and father's cattle; genetic progress through selection in reliance on generation and target standard for the analyzed herd, as well as the minimal requirements to first-calf heifer productivity.Research results showed that average milk yield in the analyzed herd was 5204 kg with average butterfat percentage 3,59%; for first-calf heifers – 4838 kg with butter-fat yield of 3,47%. Productivity of first-calf heifers and cows was higher than the standard valuation requirements to milk yield on 1350-1588 kg
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