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1.
JDS Commun ; 5(3): 215-219, 2024 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38646577

RESUMO

Although postpartum Ca supplementation strategies are often employed to prevent subclinical hypocalcemia in dairy cows, these strategies have produced a mix of beneficial, neutral, and detrimental results when assessing milk yield and subsequent disease outcomes. Because the mechanisms underlying these differing results are unknown, our objectives were to determine how common postpartum Ca supplementation strategies affect blood Ca concentrations and parathyroid hormone (PTH). We conducted a randomized controlled trial with 74 multiparous dairy cows on a commercial dairy in central New York. Cows were assigned to 1 of 4 supplementation groups immediately after calving: (1) control (CON; no Ca supplementation, n = 15); (2) conventional oral Ca supplementation (BOL-C; 43 g of oral Ca bolus administered immediately after calving and 24 h later, n = 17); (3) delayed oral Ca supplementation (BOL-D; 43 g of oral Ca bolus administered 48 and 72 h after calving, n = 15); or (4) subcutaneous infusion (SQ; 500 mL of 23% Ca borogluconate infused subcutaneously once immediately after calving, n = 15). Blood samples were collected immediately after calving (0 h) and at 8, 16, 24, 32, 40, 48, 56, 64, 72, 80, 88, 96, 120, and 168 h postpartum for a total of 15 blood samples per cow. Cows were excluded if administered Ca, via any route, by farm employees or if they died or were sold within 96 h following parturition, which left 62 cows for analysis. Linear mixed models, accounting for repeated measures, were created to analyze changes in serum total Ca (tCa) and PTH over the first 168 h after parturition and assess differences between supplementation groups. Serum tCa and PTH concentrations were not different at the time of calving among supplementation groups. There was a supplementation group by hour postcalving interaction for mean tCa concentration in which SQ cows had reduced tCa concentrations from 32 to 64 h compared with CON cows, 32 to 96 h compared with BOL-C cows, and 40 to 64 h compared with BOL-D cows. Mean PTH concentration did not differ among supplementation groups across 168 h after enrollment and was 158.1 pmol/L (95% confidence interval [CI] = 148.2 to 168.0) for CON cows, 164.0 pmol/L (95% CI = 154.9 to 173.1) for BOL-C cows, 158.7 pmol/L (95% CI = 149.2 to 168.1) for BOL-D cows, and 153.2 pmol/L (95% CI = 143.6 to 162.8) for SQ cows. Our findings suggest that although serum tCa does not differ between cows that receive conventional or delayed oral Ca bolus supplementation at calving and cows that receive no supplemental Ca, subcutaneous infusion of Ca at calving reduces serum tCa for a substantial period between 32 and 64 h postsupplementation. However, as PTH concentrations did not differ among groups across 168 h postpartum, the mechanism by which tCa is reduced remains unclear.

2.
J Dairy Sci ; 107(3): 1620-1629, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37806623

RESUMO

Supplementation of oral Ca via blanket administration of an oral Ca bolus at 0 and 24 h after calving has shown limited success in increasing production and minimizing adverse health events. Recent evidence that reductions in blood Ca at 4 d in milk (DIM) are more closely associated with negative outcomes than hypocalcemia at 0 to 24 h postpartum might explain this lack of Ca bolus efficacy. Therefore, our primary objective was to explore the effect of delayed oral Ca bolus supplementation on milk production, with secondary objectives of exploring the effects on disease incidence and postpartum blood Ca dynamics. We conducted a randomized controlled trial on multiparous Holstein cows (n = 998) from 4 herds in New York. At calving, cows were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 treatment groups: (1) control, no supplemental Ca at or around parturition (CON; n = 343); (2) conventional bolus, an oral Ca bolus containing 43 g of Ca at calving and 24 h later (BOL-C; n = 330); or (3) delayed bolus, an oral Ca bolus containing 43 g of Ca at 48 and 72 h after calving (BOL-D; n = 325). We created generalized linear mixed models to analyze differences in milk yield for the first 10 wk of lactation and serum total Ca (tCa) at 1 and 4 DIM between treatment groups; multivariable Poisson regression models were used to analyze adverse event outcomes (metritis, displaced abomasum, herd removal, or a combination of one or more of the 3) in the first 30 DIM. Milk yield increased by week and was not affected by treatment. However, a treatment by parity group interaction for milk yield showed that BOL-D cows in the third parity produced more milk than third-parity BOL-C or CON cows (BOL-D = 52.0 kg/d, 95% confidence interval [50.6, 53.4] kg/d, BOL-C = 47.9 [46.3, 49.5] kg/d, CON = 49.8 [48.2, 51.2] kg/d). The incidence of adverse health events was similar between treatments (BOL-D = 3.7%, BOL-C = 3.7%, CON = 3.6%). Serum tCa was lower at 1 than 4 DIM, and we detected no difference in tCa between treatment groups. Our findings suggest that delaying oral Ca bolus supplementation has limited influence on blood Ca concentrations but may be beneficial to cohorts of cows as a targeted prophylactic supplement to support milk production.


Assuntos
Líquidos Corporais , Cálcio , Animais , Bovinos , Feminino , Gravidez , Cálcio da Dieta , Lactação , Leite
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