Piechotta M, Mysegades W, Ligges U, Lilienthal J, Hoeflich A, Miyamoto A, Bollwein H
University of Veterinary Medicine, Clinic for Cattle, Bischofsholer Damm 15, 30173 Hannover, Germany.
University of Veterinary Medicine, Clinic for Cattle, Bischofsholer Damm 15, 30173 Hannover, Germany.
J Dairy Sci. 2015 May;98(5):3100-9. doi: 10.3168/jds.2014-8885. Epub 2015 Feb 20.
A study involving a small number of cows found that the concentrations of insulin-like growth hormone 1 (IGF1) may be a useful predictor of metabolic disease. Further, IGF1 may provide also a pathophysiological link to metabolic diseases such as ketosis. The objective of the current study was to test whether the low antepartal total IGF1 or IGF1 binding protein (IGFBP) concentrations might predict ketosis under field conditions. Clinical examinations and blood sampling were performed antepartum (262-270 d after artificial insemination) on 377 pluriparous pregnant Holstein Friesian cows. The presence of postpartum diseases were recorded (ketosis, fatty liver, displacement of the abomasum, hypocalcemia, mastitis, retention of fetal membranes, and clinical metritis or endometritis), and the concentrations of IGF1, IGFBP2, IGFBP3, and nonesterified fatty acids were measured. Cows with postpartum clinical ketosis had lower IGF1 concentrations antepartum than healthy cows. The sensitivity of antepartal IGF1 as a marker for postpartum ketosis was 0.87, and the specificity was 0.43; a positive predictive value of 0.91 and a negative predictive value of 0.35 were calculated. The cows with ketosis and retained fetal membranes had lower IGFBP2 concentrations compared with the healthy cows. It can be speculated that lower IGF1 production in the liver during late pregnancy may increase growth hormone secretions and lipolysis, thereby increasing the risk of ketosis. Lower IGFBP2 concentrations may reflect the suppression of IGFBP2 levels through higher growth hormone secretion. In conclusion, compared with nonesterified fatty acids as a predictive parameter, IGF1 and IGFBP2 may represent earlier biomarkers of inadequate metabolic adaptation to the high energy demand required postpartum.
一项涉及少量奶牛的研究发现,胰岛素样生长激素1(IGF1)的浓度可能是代谢疾病的有用预测指标。此外,IGF1还可能为酮病等代谢疾病提供病理生理联系。本研究的目的是测试产前低总IGF1或IGF1结合蛋白(IGFBP)浓度是否能在田间条件下预测酮病。对377头经产怀孕的荷斯坦弗里生奶牛在产前(人工授精后262 - 270天)进行了临床检查和采血。记录产后疾病的发生情况(酮病、脂肪肝、真胃移位、低钙血症、乳腺炎、胎膜滞留以及临床子宫内膜炎或子宫炎),并测量IGF1、IGFBP2、IGFBP3和非酯化脂肪酸的浓度。产后临床患酮病的奶牛产前IGF1浓度低于健康奶牛。产前IGF1作为产后酮病标志物的敏感性为0.87,特异性为0.43;计算出阳性预测值为0.91,阴性预测值为0.35。与健康奶牛相比,患酮病和胎膜滞留的奶牛IGFBP2浓度较低。可以推测,妊娠晚期肝脏中IGF1产生减少可能会增加生长激素分泌和脂肪分解,从而增加患酮病的风险。较低的IGFBP2浓度可能反映了通过较高的生长激素分泌对IGFBP2水平的抑制。总之,与作为预测参数的非酯化脂肪酸相比,IGF1和IGFBP2可能代表了产后对高能量需求代谢适应不足的早期生物标志物。