Publications by authors named "C Urh"

Dairy cows experience a negative energy balance due to increasing energy demands and insufficient voluntary feed intake in the transition from late pregnancy to early lactation. For supplying sufficient energy toward the conceptus and the mammary gland, insulin sensitivity in peripheral tissues is reduced leading to adipose tissue mobilization. Adiponectin, an insulin-sensitizing adipokine, is presumably related to energy metabolism and could play an important role in these metabolic adaptations.

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Dairy cows face metabolic challenges in the transition from late pregnancy to early lactation. The energy demands for the growing fetus and the onset of milk production are increasing but voluntary feed intake often decreases around parturition and cannot meet these demands. This energy balance, among others, can change the oxidative status.

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Article Synopsis
  • Excessive mobilization of body reserves during the transition from pregnancy to lactation poses risks for metabolic diseases in dairy cows.
  • An experimental study compared high body condition score (HBCS) and normal body condition score (NBCS) cows from late pregnancy to early lactation, revealing that HBCS cows had greater body condition and fat but lost more fat post-calving.
  • Despite differences in body condition and metabolic indicators, milk yield was similar between groups, although lactose levels were higher in NBCS cows.
  • Hormonal changes indicated that HBCS cows experienced more significant lipomobilization and ketogenesis, with higher serum insulin levels, while both groups showed decreased insulin and IGF-1 after calving.
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The objective of this study was to examine the effect of nutrition during the first 18 weeks of life on the physiological and transcriptional functionality of the hypothalamic (arcuate nucleus region), anterior pituitary and testes in Holstein–Friesian bull calves. Holstein–Friesian bull calves with a mean (±S.D.

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The aim of this study was (1) to examine the effect of plane of nutrition during the first and second 6 mo of life on systemic concentrations of reproductive hormones and metabolites in Holstein-Friesian dairy bulls, and (2) to establish relationships with age at puberty and postpubertal semen production potential. Holstein-Friesian bull calves (n = 83) with a mean (standard deviation) age and body weight of 17 (4.4) d and 52 (6.

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