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Journal of Dairy Science Vol. 61 No. 12 1736-1741
© 1978 by American Dairy Science Association ®
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Adrenal Responsiveness in Pre- and Postpartum Dairy Cows1

H. H. Kejela, H. H. Head, C. J. Wilcox and W. W. Thatcher

Dairy Science Department, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611

ABSTRACT

Adrenal responsiveness was evaluated by injecting 10 multiparous dairy cows with 200 IU adrenocorticotropin between –13 and –2 days prepartum (I) and postpartum between 24 and 40 h (II) and 21 and 24 days (III). Concentrations of glucocorticoids following injection were influenced by day of injection, temperature, and minimum percent relative humidity but not by breed, breed x injection day interaction, or age of cow. Likewise differences in regressions for adrenal response and mean response (ng/ml) for the three injections were nil. Mean concentrations at peak (45, 60, and 120 min postinjection samples) adjusted for preinjection concentrations also did not differ for the three periods of injection.

Mean concentrations of glucocorticoids in plasma for daily samples between –13 and –2 days prepartum were 5.3 ± .4 (n = 61), reached a peak of 14.8 ± .3 ng/ml the day of calving, and remained high for 2 days postpartum. Estradiol increased through prepartum sampling from 23.3 to 339.6 ± 94.1 pg/ml the day of calving, then declined abruptly. Progestins began to decline about –5 days prepartum from mean concentration of 4.09 ± .62 (n = 25) and attained low concentrations (.30 ± .06 ng/ml) 2 days postpartum. Although there was a surge of glucocorticoids at parturition, this was not associated with a modification in adrenal responsiveness or with prepartum concentrations of other steroid hormones of plasma. Adrenal potential in prepartum and postpartum dairy cows appears well maintained.


FOOTNOTES

1 Florida Agricultural Experiment Station Journal Series No. 769.







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