During clinical mastitis in dairy cows, the quantity of milk produced decreases and the composition of the milk is altered. As the severity of inflammation associated with the disease increases, the chemical composition of milk approaches that of blood as a consequence of increased permeability of the blood mammary barrier, or de novo intramammary synthesis, as has been suggested for mammary associated serum amyloid A3. A better understanding of these events may provide new approaches for the diagnosis and treatment of mastitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLocal and systemic changes in the acute phase proteins, haptoglobin and serum amyloid A (SAA), were studied in six dairy cows during the acute and chronic phases of experimentally induced Staphylococcus aureus mastitis. Haptoglobin and SAA were measured in serum, and in milk from infected and healthy control udder quarters within each cow. Concentrations of haptoglobin and SAA increased rapidly in both serum and milk during the acute phase of mastitis and followed a similar pattern.
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