Fiebre de Leche

Milk fever. A review. Milk fever is an imbalance in calcium metabolism affecting specially high producing dairy cows. lt is caused by a reduction in the capacity of hormonal receptors to activate the calcium homeostatic mechanisms. Hence, when plasma calcium level drops below 5 mgll 00 mL the animat dies. Factors aff ecting the animal susceptibility to this metabolic desorder are feed, animal age, breed, level of production and individual factors. Atthough, the average incidence is 3 to 4/" and mortality is low; milk f ever is related to severaldrbeases. Treatment with borogluconate gives excelent results specially if cows are treated durign the first stages of the metabolic desorder. Feeding low calcium diets for two weeks prior to freshening followed bydiets with high contents of this mineralduring lactation help to prevent milk fever. Alternativety, high dosis of vitamin D in the diet orvitamin D analogs injected before parfurition help to prevent it. Acidogenic salts like ammonium cloride, ammonium sulfate, magnesium chloride and calcium chtoride are being also used with success to prevent this metabotic disorder.

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Main Author: Sánchez González, Jorge
Format: Digital revista
Language:spa
Published: Universidad de Costa Rica 2013
Online Access:https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/nutrianimal/article/view/9968
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spelling oai:portal.ucr.ac.cr:article99682022-12-08T17:14:47Z Fiebre de Leche Sánchez González, Jorge Milk fever. A review. Milk fever is an imbalance in calcium metabolism affecting specially high producing dairy cows. lt is caused by a reduction in the capacity of hormonal receptors to activate the calcium homeostatic mechanisms. Hence, when plasma calcium level drops below 5 mgll 00 mL the animat dies. Factors aff ecting the animal susceptibility to this metabolic desorder are feed, animal age, breed, level of production and individual factors. Atthough, the average incidence is 3 to 4/" and mortality is low; milk f ever is related to severaldrbeases. Treatment with borogluconate gives excelent results specially if cows are treated durign the first stages of the metabolic desorder. Feeding low calcium diets for two weeks prior to freshening followed bydiets with high contents of this mineralduring lactation help to prevent milk fever. Alternativety, high dosis of vitamin D in the diet orvitamin D analogs injected before parfurition help to prevent it. Acidogenic salts like ammonium cloride, ammonium sulfate, magnesium chloride and calcium chtoride are being also used with success to prevent this metabotic disorder. Universidad de Costa Rica 2013-06-04 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Article Artículo application/pdf https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/nutrianimal/article/view/9968 Nutrición Animal Tropical Journal; Vol. 1 No. 1 (1994): Nutrición Animal Tropical: January-june; 5-27 Nutrición Animal Tropical; Vol. 1 Núm. 1 (1994): Nutrición Animal Tropical: enero-junio; 5-27 2215-3527 spa https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/nutrianimal/article/view/9968/9378 Derechos de autor 2014 Nutrición Animal Tropical
institution UCR
collection OJS
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-nutrianimal
tag revista
region America Central
libraryname Escuela de Zootécnia
language spa
format Digital
author Sánchez González, Jorge
spellingShingle Sánchez González, Jorge
Fiebre de Leche
author_facet Sánchez González, Jorge
author_sort Sánchez González, Jorge
title Fiebre de Leche
title_short Fiebre de Leche
title_full Fiebre de Leche
title_fullStr Fiebre de Leche
title_full_unstemmed Fiebre de Leche
title_sort fiebre de leche
description Milk fever. A review. Milk fever is an imbalance in calcium metabolism affecting specially high producing dairy cows. lt is caused by a reduction in the capacity of hormonal receptors to activate the calcium homeostatic mechanisms. Hence, when plasma calcium level drops below 5 mgll 00 mL the animat dies. Factors aff ecting the animal susceptibility to this metabolic desorder are feed, animal age, breed, level of production and individual factors. Atthough, the average incidence is 3 to 4/" and mortality is low; milk f ever is related to severaldrbeases. Treatment with borogluconate gives excelent results specially if cows are treated durign the first stages of the metabolic desorder. Feeding low calcium diets for two weeks prior to freshening followed bydiets with high contents of this mineralduring lactation help to prevent milk fever. Alternativety, high dosis of vitamin D in the diet orvitamin D analogs injected before parfurition help to prevent it. Acidogenic salts like ammonium cloride, ammonium sulfate, magnesium chloride and calcium chtoride are being also used with success to prevent this metabotic disorder.
publisher Universidad de Costa Rica
publishDate 2013
url https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/nutrianimal/article/view/9968
work_keys_str_mv AT sanchezgonzalezjorge fiebredeleche
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