Milk lactoferrin in heifers: Influence of health status and stage of lactation

The objective of the current study was to analyze the variations in lactoferrin (LF) concentrations in primiparous cows with intramammary infection and to study how the lactation stage affects these variations. In addition, we aimed to study the potential of the LF concentration in early lactation a...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chaneton, L., Bontá, M., Pol, M., Tirante, L., Bussmann, L.E.
Formato: JOUR
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00220302_v96_n8_p4977_Chaneton
Aporte de:
id todo:paper_00220302_v96_n8_p4977_Chaneton
record_format dspace
spelling todo:paper_00220302_v96_n8_p4977_Chaneton2023-10-03T14:25:28Z Milk lactoferrin in heifers: Influence of health status and stage of lactation Chaneton, L. Bontá, M. Pol, M. Tirante, L. Bussmann, L.E. Early lactation Heifer Lactoferrin Mastitis lactoferrin animal animal disease article bovine mastitis cattle cell count chemistry cytology early lactation female heifer lactation mastitis metabolism milk early lactation heifer lactoferrin mastitis Animals Cattle Cell Count Female Lactation Lactoferrin Mastitis, Bovine Milk Bacteria (microorganisms) The objective of the current study was to analyze the variations in lactoferrin (LF) concentrations in primiparous cows with intramammary infection and to study how the lactation stage affects these variations. In addition, we aimed to study the potential of the LF concentration in early lactation as a predictive factor for future infections. To accomplish this goal, a longitudinal analysis was performed for 96 primiparous cows. Milk samples were collected each month from individual quarters, and the LF concentration was determined for each sample. Criteria that included both somatic cell count (SCC) and a microbiological analysis were used to assess the health status of the quarters. Of the diseased quarters (SCC >200,000 or positive for pathogen isolation, or both), 62% corresponded to nonspecific mastitis (SCC >200,000 but microbiologically negative) and 25% corresponded to the category "presence of bacterial growth" (SCC <200,000 but microbiologically positive). Diseased quarters showed increased concentrations of LF compared with healthy quarters. However, this increase was greater during the first days of lactation compared with later periods. Kaplan-Meier analysis of time free of infection demonstrated that quarters with LF concentrations at early lactation (3-10. d in milk) greater than 0.1. mg/mL are more likely to become infected during the following lactation compared with quarters with lower LF concentrations in early lactation. The results support that LF plays a relevant role in combating intramammary infection, particularly during the first days of lactation. In addition, we present evidence of the potential use of LF as a predictive marker of future infections in the individual quarters of dairy heifers. © 2013 American Dairy Science Association. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00220302_v96_n8_p4977_Chaneton
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Early lactation
Heifer
Lactoferrin
Mastitis
lactoferrin
animal
animal disease
article
bovine mastitis
cattle
cell count
chemistry
cytology
early lactation
female
heifer
lactation
mastitis
metabolism
milk
early lactation
heifer
lactoferrin
mastitis
Animals
Cattle
Cell Count
Female
Lactation
Lactoferrin
Mastitis, Bovine
Milk
Bacteria (microorganisms)
spellingShingle Early lactation
Heifer
Lactoferrin
Mastitis
lactoferrin
animal
animal disease
article
bovine mastitis
cattle
cell count
chemistry
cytology
early lactation
female
heifer
lactation
mastitis
metabolism
milk
early lactation
heifer
lactoferrin
mastitis
Animals
Cattle
Cell Count
Female
Lactation
Lactoferrin
Mastitis, Bovine
Milk
Bacteria (microorganisms)
Chaneton, L.
Bontá, M.
Pol, M.
Tirante, L.
Bussmann, L.E.
Milk lactoferrin in heifers: Influence of health status and stage of lactation
topic_facet Early lactation
Heifer
Lactoferrin
Mastitis
lactoferrin
animal
animal disease
article
bovine mastitis
cattle
cell count
chemistry
cytology
early lactation
female
heifer
lactation
mastitis
metabolism
milk
early lactation
heifer
lactoferrin
mastitis
Animals
Cattle
Cell Count
Female
Lactation
Lactoferrin
Mastitis, Bovine
Milk
Bacteria (microorganisms)
description The objective of the current study was to analyze the variations in lactoferrin (LF) concentrations in primiparous cows with intramammary infection and to study how the lactation stage affects these variations. In addition, we aimed to study the potential of the LF concentration in early lactation as a predictive factor for future infections. To accomplish this goal, a longitudinal analysis was performed for 96 primiparous cows. Milk samples were collected each month from individual quarters, and the LF concentration was determined for each sample. Criteria that included both somatic cell count (SCC) and a microbiological analysis were used to assess the health status of the quarters. Of the diseased quarters (SCC >200,000 or positive for pathogen isolation, or both), 62% corresponded to nonspecific mastitis (SCC >200,000 but microbiologically negative) and 25% corresponded to the category "presence of bacterial growth" (SCC <200,000 but microbiologically positive). Diseased quarters showed increased concentrations of LF compared with healthy quarters. However, this increase was greater during the first days of lactation compared with later periods. Kaplan-Meier analysis of time free of infection demonstrated that quarters with LF concentrations at early lactation (3-10. d in milk) greater than 0.1. mg/mL are more likely to become infected during the following lactation compared with quarters with lower LF concentrations in early lactation. The results support that LF plays a relevant role in combating intramammary infection, particularly during the first days of lactation. In addition, we present evidence of the potential use of LF as a predictive marker of future infections in the individual quarters of dairy heifers. © 2013 American Dairy Science Association.
format JOUR
author Chaneton, L.
Bontá, M.
Pol, M.
Tirante, L.
Bussmann, L.E.
author_facet Chaneton, L.
Bontá, M.
Pol, M.
Tirante, L.
Bussmann, L.E.
author_sort Chaneton, L.
title Milk lactoferrin in heifers: Influence of health status and stage of lactation
title_short Milk lactoferrin in heifers: Influence of health status and stage of lactation
title_full Milk lactoferrin in heifers: Influence of health status and stage of lactation
title_fullStr Milk lactoferrin in heifers: Influence of health status and stage of lactation
title_full_unstemmed Milk lactoferrin in heifers: Influence of health status and stage of lactation
title_sort milk lactoferrin in heifers: influence of health status and stage of lactation
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00220302_v96_n8_p4977_Chaneton
work_keys_str_mv AT chanetonl milklactoferrininheifersinfluenceofhealthstatusandstageoflactation
AT bontam milklactoferrininheifersinfluenceofhealthstatusandstageoflactation
AT polm milklactoferrininheifersinfluenceofhealthstatusandstageoflactation
AT tirantel milklactoferrininheifersinfluenceofhealthstatusandstageoflactation
AT bussmannle milklactoferrininheifersinfluenceofhealthstatusandstageoflactation
_version_ 1807314525567844352