Department of Population Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
Department of Animal Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
J Dairy Sci. 2018 Jan;101(1):547-555. doi: 10.3168/jds.2017-13313. Epub 2017 Nov 2.
The objective of this study was to evaluate the association of postpartum plasma Ca concentration with early-lactation disease outcomes, culling within 60 d in milk, pregnancy to first service, and milk production. A total of 1,453 cows from 5 commercial dairy farms in New York State were enrolled in a prospective cohort study from February to November 2015. Blood samples were collected within 12 h of parturition, and plasma was submitted to a diagnostic laboratory for total Ca measurement. Early-lactation disease, reproductive performance, and milk production from Dairy Herd Improvement Association (DHIA) test-day data were compiled from each farm's management software. Multivariable Poisson regression models were built to evaluate the association of plasma Ca with the risks of retained placenta (RP), metritis, displaced abomasum (DA), clinical mastitis, culling within 60 d in milk, and pregnancy to first service. Repeated-measures ANOVA were used to evaluate the association of Ca at parturition with milk production across the first 9 DHIA tests. Herd was considered a random effect in all models. Primiparous cows were modeled separately from multiparous cows if differential responses were observed. Calcium was not associated with the risk of RP, metritis, clinical mastitis, or pregnancy to first service in primiparous or multiparous cows. For multiparous cows only, higher Ca concentration tended to be associated with increased culling within the first 60 d in milk. Multiparous cows with Ca ≤1.85 mmol/L had an increased risk of being diagnosed with a DA compared with cows with Ca >1.85 mmol/L. For the milk production models, Ca was not associated with the amount of milk produced within the first 9 DHIA tests in primiparous cows; however, multiparous cows with Ca ≤1.95 mmol/L produced, on average, 1.1 kg more milk per day across the 9 DHIA tests than their multiparous counterparts with Ca >1.95 mmol/L. Our results indicate that plasma Ca concentration measured within 12 h of parturition is a poor predictor of early-lactation health outcomes. Reduced Ca concentration in the immediate postpartum period was associated with higher milk production in multiparous cows. From these results, we caution that studies attempting to categorize subclinical hypocalcemia based on a single sample in the immediate postpartum period could misclassify the disorder.
本研究旨在评估产后血浆钙浓度与早期泌乳疾病结局、产后 60 天内淘汰、妊娠至首次配种和产奶量的关系。2015 年 2 月至 11 月,从纽约州 5 个商业奶牛场招募了 1453 头奶牛进行前瞻性队列研究。分娩后 12 小时内采集血样,血浆送诊断实验室进行总钙测量。从每个农场的管理软件中汇编了早期泌乳疾病、生殖性能和牛奶产量的奶业改进协会(DHI)测试日数据。使用多变量泊松回归模型评估血浆钙与胎衣滞留(RP)、子宫内膜炎、皱胃移位(DA)、临床乳腺炎、产后 60 天淘汰和妊娠至首次配种风险的关系。重复测量方差分析用于评估分娩时的钙与前 9 次 DHI 测试的产奶量之间的关系。在所有模型中,牛群被视为随机效应。如果观察到不同的反应,则将初产牛与经产牛分开建模。钙与初产或经产牛的 RP、子宫内膜炎、临床乳腺炎或首次配种风险无关。仅对于经产牛,较高的钙浓度与产后 60 天内淘汰的风险增加有关。钙浓度≤1.85mmol/L 的经产牛与钙浓度>1.85mmol/L 的经产牛相比,更有可能被诊断为 DA。对于产奶量模型,钙与初产牛前 9 次 DHI 测试的产奶量无关;然而,钙浓度≤1.95mmol/L 的经产牛在 9 次 DHI 测试中平均每天产奶量比钙浓度>1.95mmol/L 的经产牛多 1.1 公斤。我们的结果表明,分娩后 12 小时内测量的血浆钙浓度是早期泌乳健康结果的一个很差的预测指标。分娩后早期钙浓度降低与经产牛产奶量增加有关。根据这些结果,我们警告说,试图根据产后早期的单个样本对亚临床低钙血症进行分类的研究可能会错误分类该疾病。