Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Using stored mare colostrum to help foals at risk of low immunity
By Nath, Laura C et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2010·University of Melbourne, Australia·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Use of stored equine colostrum for the treatment of foals perceived to be at risk for failure of transfer of passive immunity.
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A group of Thoroughbred foals at risk for not getting enough immunity from their mothers' milk were treated with stored colostrum, which is the first milk produced after birth. The foals that received at least 300 mL of this frozen colostrum showed improved immunity levels, although some still had low immunity despite treatment. This suggests that while stored colostrum can help prevent issues with immunity transfer, it may not be a complete solution for all foals. Overall, using stored colostrum was beneficial for many foals in this study.
People also search for: foal immunity problems · stored colostrum for foals · equine colostrum treatment
Abstract
OBJECTIVE-To assess the use of stored equine colostrum for the treatment of foals perceived to be at risk for failure of transfer of passive immunity (FTPI). DESIGN-Cohort study. ANIMALS-232 Thoroughbred foals and 191 Thoroughbred mares (41 mares gave birth to 1 foal on 2 occasions). PROCEDURES-Postpartum, presuckle colostrum samples were collected from mares; samples with a colostral refractive index (cRI) > or = 23% were frozen (-20 degrees C [-4 degrees F]) and stored for > or = 7 days but < 2 years. Foals of dams that produced colostrum with a cRI value < 20% were treated with > or = 300 mL of stored colostrum that was thawed and administered via nasogastric tube on 1 to 4 occasions within 6 hours after parturition. Serum samples were obtained from colostrum-treated and nontreated foals 24 hours after treatment or suckling, respectively, for determination of serum IgG (sIgG) concentration. RESULTS-8 foals and their respective dams were excluded from the analyses. For the remaining 30 treated and 194 nontreated foals, mean +/- SD sIgG concentration was 1,597 +/- 574 mg/dL. Thirteen (5.8%) foals had sIgG concentrations < 800 mg/dL, of which 1 (0.4%) had an sIgG concentration < 400 mg/dL. Nine of these foals had suckled mares producing colostrum with a cRI value > or = 20%, and 2 foals had been treated with stored colostrum. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE-Treatment with stored colostrum appeared to be effective for prevention of FTPI in at-risk foals. However, foals were still at risk for FTPI despite suckling of or treatment with colostrum with adequate cRI values.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20470070/