Publications by authors named "L Livshitz"

This study aimed to examine the effects of a multi-day mountain bike race on amateur master athlete cyclists (AMA). AMA (50±5 years) completed 2 stages of a mountain bike race. Six weeks before racing, echocardiography, blood and maximal cardiopulmonary exercise tests (CPET) were performed.

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Instability in grain prices led to continuing worldwide growth in the proportion of fat supplements in lactating cows’ rations. However, fat supplementation was associated with decreases in feed intake, rumen fermentation, and feed digestibility. The present objectives were to test the effects of high-fat diets from calcium salts of palm oil fatty acids (CS-PFA) in lactating cow rations containing high proportions of concentrate, on feed intake, milk yields, rumen environment, and digestibility.

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Article Synopsis
  • Adipose tissue in postpartum dairy cows significantly influences their metabolism, particularly through the endocannabinoid (eCB) system, which regulates energy balance; however, little is known about this system in ruminants.
  • A study on 18 multiparous peripartum cows categorized them based on body weight loss during the first month postpartum, revealing that those with higher weight loss had increased levels of plasma fatty acids and altered insulin/glucagon ratios compared to those with lower weight loss.
  • Findings indicated that the activation of the eCB system in adipose tissue correlates with metabolic responses such as greater body weight loss, increased fat breakdown, and inflammatory processes during the early postpartum period.
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Adipose tissue has a central role in the regulation of metabolism in dairy cows, and many proteins expressed in this tissue are involved in metabolic responses to stress (Peinado et al., 2012) [1]. Environmental heat stress is one of the main stressors limiting production in dairy cattle (Fuquay, 1981; West, 2003) [2], [3], and there is a complex interaction between heat stress and the transition period from late pregnancy to onset of lactation, which is manifested in heat-stressed late-gestation cows (Tao and Dahl, 2013) [4].

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Unlabelled: Environmental heat stress and metabolic stress during transition from late gestation to lactation are main factors limiting production in dairy cattle, and there is a complex interaction between them. Many proteins expressed in adipose tissue are involved in metabolic responses to stress. We aimed to investigate the effects of seasonal heat stress on adipose proteome in late-pregnant cows, and to identify biomarkers of heat stress.

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