Therapeutic Effects of Simultaneous Use of Glucose and Insulin in Ketotic Dairy Cows

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Abstract

A glucose tolerance test was carried out on 8 ketotic dairy cows and 5 healthy dairy cows after injection of 500 ml of 50% glucose solution into the jugular vein. The blood insulin concentration increased from 6.3 μU/ml before glucose injection to 62.5 μU/ml after injection in the healthy group and from 3.0 to 22.9 μU/ml in the ketotic group. Insulin concentration before glucose injection was lower, and its increase after glucose injection was smaller, in the ketotic group. Five hundred milliliters of 50% glucose solution were administered to 15 ketotic cows by intravenous infusion once daily from d 1 to 6, and 200 U of insulin were injected subcutaneously in 8 of these cows from d 2 to 6. In the group administered insulin with glucose, the blood glucose concentration, insulin concentration, and insulin to glucagon ratio (50.5 mg/dl, 6.2 μU/ml, and .09, respectively) on d 6 were significantly higher than those for cows administered glucose only (36.3 mg/dl, 3.0 μU/ml, and .04, respectively). Also, the blood ketone bodies and free fatty acid concentrations on d 6 were significantly lower in the group receiving glucose plus insulin (22.1 μU/ml and .79 meq/L, respectively) than in the group receiving glucose alone (63.8 μU/ml and .98 meq/L, respectively). Thus, the simultaneous use of glucose and insulin is considered to be useful for the treatment of ketosis in dairy cows. © 1993, American Dairy Science Association. All rights reserved.

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Sakai, T., Hayakawa, T., Hamakawa, M., Ogura, K., & Kubo, S. (1993). Therapeutic Effects of Simultaneous Use of Glucose and Insulin in Ketotic Dairy Cows. Journal of Dairy Science, 76(1), 109–114. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(93)77329-4

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