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Influence of Blood Metabolite Concentrations on the Resumption of Postpartum Ovarian Function in Friesian-Sanga Crossbred Cows

Item

Title

Influence of Blood Metabolite Concentrations on the Resumption of Postpartum Ovarian Function in Friesian-Sanga Crossbred Cows

Language

English

Abstract

An experiment was conducted to investigate the effect of plasma concentrations of the metabolic hormones [Growth hormone (GH), insulin and insulin-like growth factor –I (IGFI)] and nutritional metabolites (glucose, cholesterol, total protein, albumin, globulin, urea and creatinine) on the resumption of postpartum ovarian activity in sixteen Friesian-Sanga crossbred cows at the Animal Research Institute’s Frafraha station. Also, correlation among the metabolic hormones and the nutritional metabolites were assessed. The cows grazed extensively on natural grassland without any feed supplementation. They were weighed monthly and scored for body condition once every week using the 9-point score (1= very thin to 9 = obese). Blood samples were taken from cows from week 1 to 16 postpartum and processed for plasma. The concentrations of the metabolic hormones (GH, insulin and IGF-I in the plasma) were measured weekly from week 1 to 10 postpartum, whilst the nutritional metabolites (glucose, cholesterol, total protein, albumin, globulin, urea and creatinine) were determined at two-weekly intervals (weeks 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9). Resumption of postpartum ovarian cyclicity was determined by measuring progesterone concentration in the plasma from week 1 to 16 in the cows. Cows were classified as having resumed ovarian activity when a plasma progesterone concentration of ≥ 1.0 ng/ml was recorded for two consecutive weekly samples.

Author

Vuvor, C. M.

Collection

Citation

“Influence of Blood Metabolite Concentrations on the Resumption of Postpartum Ovarian Function in Friesian-Sanga Crossbred Cows,” CSIRSpace, accessed September 8, 2024, http://cspace.csirgh.com/items/show/2136.