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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Monitoring the effects of oxidative stress on the growth of Holstein bull calves using Diquat.

Journal:
Frontiers in veterinary science
Year:
2025
Authors:
Liu, Ting et al.
Affiliation:
College of Animal Science and Technology · China

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Holstein bull calves received a one-time intraperitoneal injection of Diquat to explore its effects on growth, body frame, blood oxidation indices, fecal scores, and pathogenic bacteria in weaned calves. METHODS: A total of twelve 70-day-old Holstein bull calves with similar body weight (BW) and body condition were randomly assigned to one of four treatments. The treatments were as follows: Control: calves were injected with 0&#x202f;mg/kg BW Diquat in 0.9% sterilized saline; treatments 6, 8, and 10&#x202f;mg/kg BW Diquat, respectively. The experimental period lasted for 24&#x202f;days. Measurements of BW, average daily gain (ADG), fecal scores, frame gains, fecal pathogen count, and blood samples for monitoring oxidative stress were collected on days 0, 6, 12, 18, and 24. Data were analyzed using a randomized complete block design, with days considered as a repeated measurement. In addition, exponential polynomial contrasts were used to assess the linear, quadratic, and cubic treatment responses. RESULTS: Growth performance (BW) and ADG showed a cubic response (&#x202f;<&#x202f;0.02), initially decreasing and then increasing with higher Diquat dosages. Fecal scores and fecal ratios exhibited a quadratic response (&#x202f;<&#x202f;0.02), rising at a diminishing rate as Diquat injection dosages increased. Frame gains for body slope, body length, hip height, and abdominal girth displayed a linear decrease (&#x202f;<&#x202f;0.03) with increasing Diquat injection dosages. Serum aspartate aminotransferase, glutathione, total antioxidant capacity, catalase, malondialdehyde, cortisol, and noradrenaline concentrations revealed a linear increase (&#x202f;<&#x202f;0.01) in response to higher Diquat injection dosages, while alanine transaminase, superoxide dismutase, and glutathione peroxidase demonstrated a quadratic response (&#x202f;<&#x202f;0.02), increasing at a diminishing rate. Fecalconcentrations demonstrated a cubic response (0.01), whileanddemonstrated linear increases (&#x202f;<&#x202f;0.01) with increasing Diquat dosages. CONCLUSION: Diquat injection induced oxidative stress, leading to reduced growth performance, along with increased serum oxidative stress indices, fecal scores, and fecal pathogens, a response that may persist for up to 24&#x202f;days. An optimal dosage of 8&#x202f;mg/kg BW is proposed as a benchmark for elucidating oxidative stress to evaluate future technologies aimed at reducing, eliminating, or preventing oxidative stress.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40191088/