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Journal of Dairy Science Vol. 77 No. 12 3725-3729
© 1994 by American Dairy Science Association ®
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Cortisol Increases in Plasma of Holstein Heifer Calves, from Handling and Method of Electrical Dehorning

J. E. Wohlt 1, M. E. Allyn 1, P. K. Zajac 1, and L. S. Katz 1

1 Department of Animal Sciences, Rutgers—The State University, New Brunswick, NJ 08903

Changes in cortisol in plasma were used to assess stress when calves were restrained and then dehorned. Thirteen Holstein heifer calves between 3 and 4 wk of age were used over 4 d; each calf served as its own control. On d 1, 2, and 4, blood was sampled initially while calves were in a pen, 5 min after being placed in a restraint chute, and then at 5, 15, 30, and 45 min and 1, 2, 3, 4, 8, and 12 h after simulated or actual dehorning. On d 1, dehorning was simulated. On d 2 and 4, one horn bud of each calf was cauterized, respectively; sequence of horns (right, left) and dehorning instruments (conventional electrical, BuddexTM) were alternated for all calves. Day or previous dehorning procedures had no effect on initial concentrations of cortisol in plasma. However, after calves were placed in a chute, cortisol in plasma increased with each entrance. Cortisol in plasma peaked at 5 min posthandling (d 1, 11.3 ng/ml) or 15 min postdehorning (electrical, 21.9 ng/ml; BuddexTM, 20.7 ng/ml). These data suggest that both dehorning procedures resulted in similar rates of synthesis and secretion of cortisol.

Key Words: calves • electrical dehorning • plasma cortisol

Submitted on January 31, 1994
Accepted on June 24, 1994




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Duration of restraint and isolation stress as a model to study the dark-cutting condition in cattle
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