Antioxidant Status of Dairy Cows Supplemented Prepartum with Vitamin E and Selenium

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Abstract

Possible relationships among dietary antioxidants, oxidative status, and placental retention were investigated in periparturient dairy cows. During 6 wk prepartum, 16 cows each were given daily by capsule 1000 IU of vitamin E, 3 mg of Se, both vitamin E and Se, or neither (control). α-Tocopherol in serum and fast-acting antioxidants in plasma increased, but, in red blood cells, thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances decreased during the last 6 wk before parturition in cows given vitamin E. These measurements were unaffected by supplementation of Se. Cows that had retained placenta ≥12 h had lower fastacting antioxidants in plasma and glutathione peroxidase in red blood cells up to 2 wk before calving than did cows that shed fetal membranes in <12 h. Results suggest that inadequate dietary antioxidants may increase oxidative stress, production of lipid peroxides, and incidence of retained fetal membranes in dairy cows. © 1994, American Dairy Science Association. All rights reserved.

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Brzezinska-Slebodzinska, E., Miller, J. K., Quigley, J. D., Moore, J. R., & Madsen, F. C. (1994). Antioxidant Status of Dairy Cows Supplemented Prepartum with Vitamin E and Selenium. Journal of Dairy Science, 77(10), 3087–3095. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(94)77251-9

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