PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

A veterinary perspective of on-farm evaluation of nutrition and reproduction.

Journal:
Journal of dairy science
Year:
1998
Authors:
Studer, E
Affiliation:
Carnation Farm · United States

Plain-English summary

In the past, programs aimed at improving the reproductive health of dairy cows focused mainly on controlling diseases and improving breeding techniques. However, even with veterinary help, the success rate for cows getting pregnant dropped from 55% to 45%, although milk production increased significantly. Researchers have found that the nutritional needs of high-producing cows might be affecting their ability to reproduce, leading veterinarians to pay more attention to dairy nutrition. Now, fertility checks for cows also look at their nutrition and body condition, revealing that thin cows can stop cycling, overweight cows can develop serious health issues, and cows with poor diets during key periods can face various complications. Overall, understanding the link between nutrition and reproduction has become crucial for improving fertility in dairy herds.

Abstract

Reproductive herd health programs of the 1960s and 1970s focused primarily on the control of infectious and noninfectious diseases of the reproductive tract, estrus detection, breeding technique, semen quality and handling, and endocrine imbalances. Despite veterinary intervention, conception rates dropped from 55% before this period to 45% after this period, but milk production increased greatly. Because studies have shown that the additional nutritional needs for high producing cows may be a factor limiting reproduction, bovine practitioners have become more involved with dairy nutrition. New emphasis has been placed on the concept of total production medicine with the anticipation that improved nutrition would improve reproduction. Because of a better understanding of the dynamics of energy in the dairy cow and its effect on reproduction, fertility examinations now include nutrition monitoring and body condition scoring. Several relationships between nutrition and fertility have been identified: high producing thin cows that drop 0.75 to 1.0 in body condition score resulting in anestrus; fat dry cows that develop fatty livers and associated postpartum disease; heifers that have good milk production but prolonged anestrus; dry cows with ration imbalances during the transition period that develop milk fever, retained placenta, displaced abomasum, metritis, or endometritis; lactating cows with disease in midlactation, especially feet and leg problems, resulting in lowered fertility; and healthy, lactating cows with poor conception that have high concentrations of urea N in blood or milk.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9565892/