Pennington J A, Spahr S L, Lodge J R
J Dairy Sci. 1976 Aug;59(8):1528-31. doi: 10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(76)84398-6.
Concentration of progesterone in whole milk was used to diagnose pregnancy in lactating dairy cows. Milk samples were taken 21 to 22 days postbreeding and analyzed for progesterone by radioimmunoassay. Progesterone in milk greater than 11 ng/ml, 8 to 11 ng/ml, and less than 8 ng/ml was used classify animals as pregnant, questionable, and not pregnant. In this classification for 123 cows, 67 were classified pregnant, 7 questionable, and 49 not pregnant. A comparison of progesterone diagnosis with actual calving results showed agreement of 73 and 98% for the cows classified as pregnant and not pregnant. Thirteen of 19 animals, in which there were discrepancies between diagnoses by milk progesterone and calving results, were not detected in estrus within 30 days after breeding. One animal classified not pregnant by milk progesterone was pregnant.