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Comparison of Bovine Mammary Involution and Intramammary Infections Following Intramammary Treatment with Casein Hydrolysate and Other Conventional Treatments at Dry-Off

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Alternatives to antibiotic therapy for mastitis in dairy cattle are of interest to the dairy industry and society. Reduced use of antibiotics while maintaining or improving animal welfare is desirable. We studied the intramammary infusion of casein hydrolysate, alone or combined with...

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Autores principales: Britten, Justine E., Rood, Kerry A., Wilson, David J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8388654/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34438817
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11082360
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author Britten, Justine E.
Rood, Kerry A.
Wilson, David J.
author_facet Britten, Justine E.
Rood, Kerry A.
Wilson, David J.
author_sort Britten, Justine E.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Alternatives to antibiotic therapy for mastitis in dairy cattle are of interest to the dairy industry and society. Reduced use of antibiotics while maintaining or improving animal welfare is desirable. We studied the intramammary infusion of casein hydrolysate, alone or combined with standard dry cow treatment, at the beginning of the dry period before cows have their next calf. The effects on mammary involution and milk quality suggested that infusion of casein hydrolysate alone or combined with internal teat sealant may be an alternative to antibiotic dry cow therapy. ABSTRACT: Alternatives to routine antibiotic treatment of dairy cattle during the dry period before their next calving are of interest. This was a preliminary study of whether intramammary infusion of casein hydrolysate, administered alone or combined with standard dry treatment, accelerated the rate of mammary involution early in the dry period. Four treatments were studied in a split udder design. One udder half was assigned a treatment, and the contralateral half was administered dry cow treatment + internal teat sealant as a control. Treatments were casein hydrolysate, casein hydrolysate + dry cow treatment, casein hydrolysate + teat sealant and casein hydrolysate + dry cow treatment + teat sealant. Cows (n = 16) were blocked by a number of intramammary infections per udder half (0 or 1+) and randomized to treatments. Milk production was not different between control or treated udder halves post-calving. A generalized linear mixed model tested for differences between the treatment groups in the concentration of mammary involution indicators in milk: somatic cell count, bovine lactoferrin and bovine serum albumin. At 7 days, dry udder halves treated with casein hydrolysate had higher milk concentrations of lactoferrin than those treated with casein hydrolysate + dry cow treatment, casein hydrolysate + teat sealant and control. At 10 days dry, bovine serum albumin was higher in udder halves treated with casein hydrolysate than in those treated with casein hydrolysate + dry cow treatment, casein hydrolysate + dry cow treatment + teat sealant and control. Post-calving, casein hydrolysate-treated udder halves produced 51% of total milk, unchanged from before dry-off. There were seven total intramammary infections entering the dry period, all caused by coagulase-negative staphylococci. Cure rates (3/7, 43%) were not different among all treatments and control, partly because of the small sample size. Intramammary infusion of casein hydrolysate at the end of lactation may be an alternative or possible adjunct to antibiotic dry cow therapy.
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spelling pubmed-83886542021-08-27 Comparison of Bovine Mammary Involution and Intramammary Infections Following Intramammary Treatment with Casein Hydrolysate and Other Conventional Treatments at Dry-Off Britten, Justine E. Rood, Kerry A. Wilson, David J. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Alternatives to antibiotic therapy for mastitis in dairy cattle are of interest to the dairy industry and society. Reduced use of antibiotics while maintaining or improving animal welfare is desirable. We studied the intramammary infusion of casein hydrolysate, alone or combined with standard dry cow treatment, at the beginning of the dry period before cows have their next calf. The effects on mammary involution and milk quality suggested that infusion of casein hydrolysate alone or combined with internal teat sealant may be an alternative to antibiotic dry cow therapy. ABSTRACT: Alternatives to routine antibiotic treatment of dairy cattle during the dry period before their next calving are of interest. This was a preliminary study of whether intramammary infusion of casein hydrolysate, administered alone or combined with standard dry treatment, accelerated the rate of mammary involution early in the dry period. Four treatments were studied in a split udder design. One udder half was assigned a treatment, and the contralateral half was administered dry cow treatment + internal teat sealant as a control. Treatments were casein hydrolysate, casein hydrolysate + dry cow treatment, casein hydrolysate + teat sealant and casein hydrolysate + dry cow treatment + teat sealant. Cows (n = 16) were blocked by a number of intramammary infections per udder half (0 or 1+) and randomized to treatments. Milk production was not different between control or treated udder halves post-calving. A generalized linear mixed model tested for differences between the treatment groups in the concentration of mammary involution indicators in milk: somatic cell count, bovine lactoferrin and bovine serum albumin. At 7 days, dry udder halves treated with casein hydrolysate had higher milk concentrations of lactoferrin than those treated with casein hydrolysate + dry cow treatment, casein hydrolysate + teat sealant and control. At 10 days dry, bovine serum albumin was higher in udder halves treated with casein hydrolysate than in those treated with casein hydrolysate + dry cow treatment, casein hydrolysate + dry cow treatment + teat sealant and control. Post-calving, casein hydrolysate-treated udder halves produced 51% of total milk, unchanged from before dry-off. There were seven total intramammary infections entering the dry period, all caused by coagulase-negative staphylococci. Cure rates (3/7, 43%) were not different among all treatments and control, partly because of the small sample size. Intramammary infusion of casein hydrolysate at the end of lactation may be an alternative or possible adjunct to antibiotic dry cow therapy. MDPI 2021-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC8388654/ /pubmed/34438817 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11082360 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Britten, Justine E.
Rood, Kerry A.
Wilson, David J.
Comparison of Bovine Mammary Involution and Intramammary Infections Following Intramammary Treatment with Casein Hydrolysate and Other Conventional Treatments at Dry-Off
title Comparison of Bovine Mammary Involution and Intramammary Infections Following Intramammary Treatment with Casein Hydrolysate and Other Conventional Treatments at Dry-Off
title_full Comparison of Bovine Mammary Involution and Intramammary Infections Following Intramammary Treatment with Casein Hydrolysate and Other Conventional Treatments at Dry-Off
title_fullStr Comparison of Bovine Mammary Involution and Intramammary Infections Following Intramammary Treatment with Casein Hydrolysate and Other Conventional Treatments at Dry-Off
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Bovine Mammary Involution and Intramammary Infections Following Intramammary Treatment with Casein Hydrolysate and Other Conventional Treatments at Dry-Off
title_short Comparison of Bovine Mammary Involution and Intramammary Infections Following Intramammary Treatment with Casein Hydrolysate and Other Conventional Treatments at Dry-Off
title_sort comparison of bovine mammary involution and intramammary infections following intramammary treatment with casein hydrolysate and other conventional treatments at dry-off
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8388654/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34438817
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11082360
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