Abstract
Slow-release bST was given to dairy cows as a single injection prior to calving to determine whether such treatment prevented parturient hypocalcemia or modified the concentrations of Ca and parathyroid hormone-related protein in milk during the periparturient period. Cows were treated about 1 wk prepartum, and serial blood and milk samples were taken from these and similar prepartum control cows over a 3-wk period. Plasma growth hormone concentrations in the bST-treated group reached a peak 2 d after administration and then declined linearly to control concentrations over a 14-d period. Plasma Ca was unaffected by bST treatment 1 d prior to parturition, on the day of parturition, and at 1 and 6 to 9 d postpartum. Plasma P was higher, and plasma Mg was lower, in the bST-treated group on the day of parturition and 1 d postpartum. Concentrations of Ca, P, Mg, and protein in milk were lower in bST-treated cows than in controls at parturition. Milk production of the bST-treated and control groups was similar when measured at d 6 to 9 postpartum. Concentrations of parathyroid hormone-related protein in milk were substantial at parturition and remained high thereafter, although at parturition the concentration in the milk of the bST-treated group was lower than that of the control group. © 1994, American Dairy Science Association. All rights reserved.
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Law, F. M. K., Leaver, D. D., Martin, T. J., Selleck, K., Clarke, I. J., & Moate, P. J. (1994). Effect of Treatment of Dairy Cows with Slow-Release Bovine Somatotropin During the Periparturient Period on Minerals in Plasma and Milk and on Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein in Milk. Journal of Dairy Science, 77(8), 2242–2248. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(94)77167-8
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