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J. Dairy Sci. 86:2094-2097
© American Dairy Science Association, 2003.

Mammary Blood Flow Does Not Limit Milk Yield in Lactating Goats1

P. Lacasse* and C. G. Prosser{dagger}

* Dairy and Swine Research and Development Centre, Agriculture Agri-Food Canada, P.O. Box 90, 2000 Route 108 East, Lennoxville, Quebec, J1M 1Z3, Canada
{dagger} AgResearch, Ruakura Research Centre, Private Bag 3123, Hamilton, New Zealand

Corresponding author:
P. Lacasse; e-mail:
lacassep{at}agr.gc.ca.

There is a close relationship between mammary blood flow (MBF) and milk production, but whether MBF is limiting milk yield has not been determined. Five lactating goats received close arterial (external pudic) infusion of PBS or the nitric oxide donor diethylamine NONOate (0.5 mg/h; NONate) for 6 h, according to a crossover design. Goats were hand milked (with oxytocin) every 2 h starting 2 h before and ending 6 h after the end of the infusion. In one goat, a transit time flow probe was implanted around the infused and noninfused artery, whilst in another goat a flow probe was implanted around the infused artery only. Infusion of PBS did not affect MBF or milk production. As with previous results (Lacasse et al., 1996), NONate induced a rapid increase (up to 250% of preinfusion level) in MBF in the infused gland only. Mammary blood flow was still above the preinfusion level at the end of the infusion period. Despite this increase in MBF, NONate did not affect milk production. Milk yield ratio (infused/noninfused gland) averaged 1.20, 1.12, and 1.17 for the preinfusion, infusion and post infusion periods, respectively. Similarly, protein, fat and lactose yields were not affected by PBS or NONate infusion. These results provide no support to the contention that increasing MBF can enhance milk production.

Key Words: mammary blood flow • nitric oxide • dairy goats

Abbreviation key: MBF = mammary blood flow, NONate = diethylamine NONOate




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