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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Use of a hand-held meter for detecting subclinical ketosis in dairy cows.

Journal:
Research in veterinary science
Year:
2010
Authors:
Voyvoda, Huseyin & Erdogan, Hasan
Affiliation:
Department of Internal Medicine

Plain-English summary

Researchers tested a new hand-held device called the Optium Xceed to check for subclinical ketosis (a condition where cows have high levels of ketones in their blood but show no obvious symptoms) in dairy cows. They took blood samples from 78 healthy Holstein cows that had recently given birth and compared the results from the hand-held meter to those from traditional lab tests. The hand-held meter showed higher levels of a substance called BHBA, which indicates ketosis, and it was found to be quite accurate for detecting this condition, with a sensitivity of 85% and specificity of 94%. Overall, the study concluded that this device can be a quick and reliable way to diagnose subclinical ketosis in cows on farms.

Abstract

The Optium Xceed is a new hand-held meter for determining blood β-hydroxybutyrate (BHBA) and glucose in human medicine. The objective of this study was to compare BHBA and glucose results obtained using the hand-held meter with those results made with a laboratory method and to evaluate its usefulness as a cowside test in the diagnosis of subclinical ketosis (SCK) in dairy cows. Seventy-eight blood samples from clinically healthy Holstein cows between 5 and 60 days post-calving were analysed. BHBA and glucose values were significantly higher with the hand-held meter versus laboratory methods. Correlation coefficients (r) for BHBA and glucose with the Optium Xceed versus laboratory methods were 0.97 and 0.63, respectively. Based on Bland-Altman plot and Passing-Bablok regression, agreement between two methods was good for BHBA but the agreement for glucose was only fair. When SCK was defined as plasma BHBA levels ≥ 1200 μmol/L, the sensitivity and specificity of the hand-held meter ketone testing in determining SCK were 85% and 94%, respectively. Raising the threshold of the laboratory method to ≥ 1400 μmol/L, the sensitivity and specificity incremented to 0.90 and 0.98, respectively. In conclusion, the blood ketone-monitoring device can be used as a rapid and reliable diagnostic test to detect SCK under field conditions.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20471047/