Two studies were conducted to determine if clinical metritis could be prevented or decreased in at-risk lactating dairy cows by a single treatment with Excede Sterile Suspension (ceftiofur crystalline free acid sterile suspension [CCFA-SS]) administered within 24 hours after an abnormal calving. Study 1 was a preliminary study and study 2 was a clinical trial (designed to confirm the results of study 1). In both studies, abnormal calving was defined as cows that had dystocia (required assistance), twins, abortion, retained fetal membranes for 12 hours or more, or any combination thereof.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objectives of this study were to evaluate efficacy of a 2-dose regimen of ceftiofur crystalline free acid sterile suspension (CCFA-SS) for treatment of acute metritis in lactating dairy cows under field conditions and to provide additional safety and injection site tolerance data for injections at the base of the ear. Cows at 15 dairies with rectal temperature ≥ 39.5°C and fetid uterine discharge ≤ 10 d postcalving were randomly assigned by blocks of 2, based on order of entry and without regard to parity, to treatment with saline (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objective of this study was to compare growth performance and carcass and meat quality characteristics of growing-finishing pigs fed diets containing Roundup Ready wheat (MON 71800), compared with the non-transgenic genetically similar parental control wheat (MON 71900), and four commercial varieties of non-transgenic wheat (HANK, Westbred 926, Express and Zeke). The study was carried out as a split-plot design with a 2 × 6 factorial arrangement of treatments (two genders and six wheat varieties). A three-phase dietary program was used; all diets were formulated with a fixed level of wheat inclusion (70%, 80% and 85% for the Grower, Finisher I and Finisher II phases, respectively).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne grazing and two feeding experiments were conducted to compare the feeding value of corn residue or corn grain from a genetically enhanced corn hybrid (corn rootworm-protected; event MON 863) with nontransgenic, commercially available, reference hybrids. In Exp. 1, two 13.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo studies were conducted at two locations to evaluate growth performance and carcass characteristics of growing-finishing pigs fed diets containing either YieldGard Rootworm corn (MON 863), a non-transgenic genetically similar corn (RX670), or two conventional nontransgenic corn hybrids (DK647 and RX740). A randomized complete block design with a 2 x 4 factorial arrangement of treatments (two genders and four corn hybrids) was used. Study 1 used 72 barrows and 72 gilts (progeny of Danbred sires x [Danbred x NE White line] dams grown from 22.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 42-d experiment compared the nutritional value of genetically modified glyphosate-tolerant (Roundup Ready event RT73) canola meal to that of conventional canola meal when fed to rapidly growing Ross x Ross 508 broilers using a randomized complete block design. Five pens of males and 5 pens of females were used in each of 8 canola meal treatments (glyphosate-tolerant, nontransgenic control, and 6 commercial varieties). Broilers (10 birds/pen) were fed approximately 25% wt/wt canola meal during the first 20 d and 20% wt/wt canola meal thereafter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo studies were conducted at two locations to evaluate growth performance and carcass characteristics of growing-finishing pigs fed diets containing either glyphosate-tolerant Roundup Ready (event nk603) corn, a nontransgenic genetically similar control corn (RX670), or two conventional sources of nontransgenic corn (RX740 and DK647). A randomized complete block design (three and four blocks in Studies 1 and 2, respectively) with a 2 x 4 factorial arrangement of treatments (two genders and four corn lines) was used. Study 1 used 72 barrows and 72 gilts (housed in single-gender groups of six; six pens per dietary treatment) with initial and final BW of approximately 22 and 116 kg, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree experiments were conducted to compare the feeding value of genetically enhanced corn (Roundup Ready corn events GA21 and nk603) with nontransgenic hybrids. The four treatments included two separate reference hybrids (REF), the near-isogenic control hybrid (CON), and the genetically enhanced corn (RR), resulting in two preplanned comparisons of CON vs. RR and RR vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLactating dairy cows were used to determine effects of feeding glyphosate-tolerant or insect-protected corn hybrids on feed intake, milk production, milk composition, and ruminal digestibility. Corn resistant to European corn borer (Ostrinia nubilalis) infestation (Bt-MON810), or its nontransgenic control (Bt-CON), were planted in alternating fields during two successive years. One-half of each strip was harvested for whole plant corn silage and the remainder was allowed to mature and harvested as grain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSixteen multiparous Holstein cows averaging 74 d in milk were used in a replicated 4 x 4 Latin square to compare the effects on animal performance of feeding whole plant silage and grain from a glyphosate-tolerant corn hybrid (event NK603), a nontransgenic control hybrid, and two commercial nontransgenic hybrids (DK647 and RX740). The grain and silage from the four corn hybrids were produced using the same procedures and under similar agronomic conditions at the University of Illinois. On a dry matter (DM) basis, diets contained 30% corn silage and 27.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo studies were conducted to evaluate the effect of a glyphosate-tolerant (event nk603) and a corn rootworm protected (event MON863) corn hybrid on feed intake and milk production compared with the nontransgenic hybrid and two reference hybrids. In Experiment 1, 16 multiparous Holstein cows were assigned to one of four treatments in replicated 4 x 4 Latin squares with 28-d periods. Diets contained 40% (dry matter [DM] basis) of either 1) glyphosate-tolerant corn silage (GT), 2) nontransgenic control corn silage, or 3) two nontransgenic reference hybrids which are commercially available.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDehulled soybean meal prepared from genetically modified, herbicide (glyphosate)-tolerant Roundup Ready soybeans containing the CP4 EPSPS protein and near-isogenic conventional soybeans were assessed in an experiment with growing-finishing pigs. The soybeans were grown in the yr 2000 under similar agronomic conditions except that the Roundup Ready soybeans were sprayed with Roundup herbicide. Both were processed at the same plant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo determine effects of rapid prepubertal growth on first-lactation milk production, Holstein heifers were randomly assigned to one of three treatments. Thirty-five heifers were fed a standard diet to meet NRC recommendations and produce 0.8 kg of body weight (BW) gain/d (standard).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBovine somatotropin (bST) and exposure to long daily photoperiod increase milk yield of dairy cattle. We tested the hypothesis that long daily photoperiod and bST treatment would increase milk yield in an additive manner in lactating cows. At winter solstice, 40 lactating cows were started on a 140-d experiment; cows were greater than 70 d in milk (DIM) and were balanced for uniformity of DIM and milk yield within parity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForty Holstein heifers [body weight (BW) = 126 kg] were blocked by BW into groups of 4, and, within each block, heifers were randomly assigned to one of four treatments. Twenty heifers had ad libitum access to a diet formulated to produce a BW gain of 0.8 kg/d (control diet), and 20 heifers had ad libitum access to a diet formulated to produce a BW gain of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe antimicrobial compound U-82,127 (Pharmacia & Upjohn, Kalamazoo, MI) is a thiopeptide that belongs to a series of cyclic peptide antibiotics produced by Streptomyces arginensis. It is active mainly against Gram-positive organisms. A study involving 576 growing-finishing pigs was conducted at six locations to assess the efficacy of the growth-promoting compound from approximately 19 to 89 kg BW.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo determine whether bST additively increases milk production in cows milked at different frequencies per day, 118 Holstein primiparous and multiparous cows were milked two or three times daily beginning at parturition and received either 14 mg of bST or no injection beginning at d 75 of lactation. Increased milking frequency from two to three times daily increased 3.5% FCM in multiparous (4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHerds (n = 9) were used on which cattle (n = 598) received 0, 4.3, 8.6, 12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForty-one Holstein cows were injected with 0, 5, or 14 mg/d of bST for the last 46 +/- 6 d before parturition. Compared with data for controls, the 5- and 14-mg doses of bST increased apparent protein synthesis about 16% before parturition. Exogenous bST before parturition increased apparent protein degradation 30% during wk 1 after parturition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCows (n = 210) were assigned to the following treatments: uninjected controls through 130 d postpartum; zero to high, uninjected through 60 d then injected with 14 mg of bST/d from 61 through 130 d postpartum; low, 5 mg of bST/d from 14 through 130 d postpartum; low to high, 5 mg of bST/d from 14 through 60 d then 14 mg of BST/d from 61 through 130 d postpartum; and high, 14 mg of bST/d from 14 through 130 d postpartum. Cows given 5 mg of bST/d (low and low to high treatments) yielded 1.2 kg of FCM/d more and high group cows yielded 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirty multiparous (cows) and 15 primiparous (heifers) lactating Holstein cattle were used in a 112-d study to examine the effects of pattern of administration of recombinantly derived bST on 3.5% FCM yield. Ten cows and 5 heifers each received either no injection (controls), 14 mg of bST daily, or four repetitions of 14 mg of bST/d for 14 d followed by 14 d of no injection (intermittent bST).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objective was to determine effects of energy balance and body condition on estrous behavior and estrous cycles in Holstein heifers. Before the experiment heifers were fed so body condition remained moderate or they became fat. During the 2 x 2 factorial experiment, moderate and fat heifers were in positive or negative energy balance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroendocrinology
October 1990
Previous work established that intravenous administration of the opioid receptor antagonist naloxone abruptly increased release of luteinizing hormone (LH) and decreased release of prolactin (PRL) in suckled anestrous ewes and also increased LH release in cyclic luteal ewes. The goal of the present research was to identify brain sites at which local unilateral infusions of naloxone would consistently duplicate the previously noted effects of intravenous naloxone. Intracerebral guide tubes were surgically implanted into the brain of 13 nonpregnant and 16 pregnant ewes at least 4 weeks prior to experimentation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn two experiments, 17-wk-old Holstein bulls exposed to 16 (Exp. 1) or 24 h (Exp. 2) of light daily were compared with bulls given 8 h of light.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPineal tissue was removed from eight 6-wk-old bull calves (PX), whereas eight similar calves received sham pinealectomies (SPX). Before and after surgery, calves received 8 h of light (L):16 h of darkness (D) daily until 20 wk of age (wk 0 of experiment), at which time eight calves (four PX and four SPX) were maintained under 8L:16D for 12 additional wk, whereas the remaining eight calves received 16L:8D. At 0, 4, 8 and 12 wk of experiment, blood was collected from each animal for 26 h at 30-min intervals.
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