Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Effect of an integrated veterinary herd health program on fertility performance and incidence of reproductive disorders in five dairy herds.
- Journal:
- Polish journal of veterinary sciences
- Year:
- 2021
- Authors:
- Barański, W et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Animal Reproduction with Clinic
Plain-English summary
This study looked at five groups of Polish Holstein-Friesian dairy cows to see how a veterinary health program affected their fertility and reproductive health over four years. The cows produced an average of about 9,000 kilograms of milk each year. After the program was put in place, the rate of successful pregnancies after the first breeding increased from 43.2% to 51.2%, and there were fewer instances of cows needing multiple breedings to become pregnant. Additionally, the number of cows experiencing silent heat (when a cow is in heat but shows no signs) dropped significantly. Overall, the program helped improve or maintain the cows' fertility while also increasing their milk production, which rose from 9,300 to 9,530 kilograms per cow per year.
Abstract
The study was carried out in 5 dairy herds of Polish Holstein-Friesian cows. The average milk yield was about 9000 kg per year. For each herd, the following fertility parameters were calculated at the start of the program and 4 years later: first- service conception rate, services per conception, length of inter-calving period and culling rate due to infertility. The incidence of silent heat, ovarian cysts, ovarian afunction, retained placenta and clinical endometritis was also recorded. Four years after implementation of the program, the average first-service conception rate increased from 43.2% to 51.2%. In three herds the differences were statistically significant (p⟨0.05). There was also a decrease in the number of services per pregnancy and in the culling rate due to infertility. Fertility performance was maintained in two herds. The average incidence of silent heat decreased from 38.1% to 29.7% and the difference was statistically significant (p⟨0.05) in three herds. There was no significant reduction in incidence of other reproductive disorders during the 4 years except for clinical endometritis in one herd. The average milk yield increased from 9300 kg to 9530 kg milk per cow per year. In conclusion, the results indicate that the implementation of the integrated veterinary herd health program improved or maintained fertility performance despite an increase in milk yield.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34730301/