Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
5,831 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A study was conducted to determine the impact of dietary P intake on vitamin D metabolism and incidence of parturient paresis in aged dairy cows. Thirty dairy cows (10/group) were fed one of three experimental diets for approximately 28 d precalving. Phosphorus intake was .7, 1, or 3 times daily maintenance requirement and Ca intake was three times daily maintenance requirement for all cows. There was a 20% incidence of parturient paresis in each group. Prepartum dietary P intake had no effect on precalving or calving plasma Ca concentrations. Cows fed the low P (.7 times) diet had higher plasma Ca at 3 and 5 d postcalving than did cows fed P at 1 or 3 times maintenance. Plasma phosphorus concentrations reflected dietary P intake. Dietary P intake had no effect on plasma Mg, free hydroxyproline, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, or 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D concentrations. The range in dietary P from .7 to 3 times maintenance requirement had no effect on the incidence of parturient paresis. However, it did appear to influence Ca homeostasis during the postpartum period as cows fed the low P diet had higher plasma calcium concentrations postcalving. This may be a result of the low P diet enhancing intestinal C absorption by a vitamin D-mediated transport mechanism.
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PMID:Impact of prepartum dietary phosphorus intake on calcium homeostasis at parturition. 361 74

Path analysis and logistic regression were used to model direct and indirect relationships among clinical periparturient (within 30 d after calving) retained placenta, metritis, veterinary-assisted dystocia, uncomplicated and complicated ketosis, left displaced abomasum, parturient paresis, mastitis, and estimated nutrient intakes (protein, calcium, phosphorus, energy; coded into terciles) in the last 3 wk of the dry period. Data were from 1,374 multiparous Holstein lactations for calvings from March 1981 through February 1982 in 31 commercial herds in central New York. Periparturient disorders occurred as a complex. Odds ratios for the multiplicative effects of parturient paresis on incidence of veterinary-assisted dystocia, retained placenta, complicated ketosis, and clinical mastitis were 7.2, 4.0, 23.6, and 5.4, respectively. Reproductive disorders were interrelated. Retained placenta, left displaced abomasum, and parturient paresis directly increased risk of complicated ketosis (odds ratios were 16.4, 53.5, and 23.6, respectively). Higher terciles of estimated energy intake in the last 3 wk of the dry period decreased risk of veterinary-assisted dystocia and left displaced abomasum, while higher terciles of estimated protein intake decreased risk of retained placenta and uncomplicated ketosis. Estimated nutrient intakes were directly related to subsequent metabolic disorders and directly and indirectly related (mediated by metabolic disorders) to reproductive disorders. The study suggests that feeding higher intakes (relative to National Research Council recommendations) of protein and energy in the last 3 week of the dry period may reduce the incidence of metabolic and reproductive disorders. Exact recommendations as to the amounts and types of feed cannot be made from our results.
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PMID:Path analysis of dry period nutrition, postpartum metabolic and reproductive disorders, and mastitis in Holstein cows. 406 48

Fifty percent (7/14) of aged cows treated with 4 mg 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 intramuscularly precalving developed parturient paresis shortly after calving compared with 7% (1/14) of controls. Injection of 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 increased concentrations in blood plasma 15 times that in control cows. Blood plasma 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D concentrations were elevated in all groups on day of calving but were not different. Injection of 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 did not alter the typical plasma profile for calcium, phosphorus, or 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D of paretic or nonparetic cows around parturition. Although injection of 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 was associated with an increased incidence of parturient paresis, the mechanism remains unknown.
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PMID:24,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 administration increases incidence of parturient paresis. 661 59

Dry cow feeding and management were examined for predisposing factors for parturient paresis in 1,983 Holstein cows from New York Dairy Herd Improvement Cooperative records, monthly technician visits to 31 farms, and questionnaires. Variables were estimated transmitting ability, season of calving, lactation number, parturient paresis, estimated potential hours per day of exercise, and estimated nutrient intakes (protein, calcium, phosphorus, and energy) during the preceding dry period. Nutrient intakes were estimated by farmers for the average dry cow (season dependent) in their herd for the early (greater than or equal to 3 wk prepartum) and late portions of the dry period. Intakes were percentages of National Research Council requirements for a 550 kg dry cow in the last 2 mo of gestation. Nutrient intakes were coded by ranking the herds by percentage of each requirement. Codes represented the approximate lower third, middle third, and top third of the herds. Individual cows were assigned their herd nutrition codes by their season of calving. For stepwise discriminant analysis, the group variable was parturient paresis (94 cases, 1,889 controls). As lactation number (most important) and estimated transmitting ability (second most important) increased, incidence of parturient paresis increased. Parturient paresis was reduced with high dietary protein fed during the early stage of the dry period, with low phosphorus and high energy (lead feeding) closer to calving, and with decreased opportunity for exercise. Most cows were overfed calcium, especially in the late stage of the dry period, but calcium intake was not important when phosphorus was low.
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PMID:Epidemiology of parturient paresis: predisposing factors with emphasis on dry cow feeding and management. 672 26

Twenty Jersey cows were fed one of four prepartal diets: a)low calcium, low phosphorus (LCLP); b) low calcium, high phosphorus (LCLP); c) high calcium, low phosphorus (HCLP); or d)high calcium, high phosphorus (HCHP). Diets were fed for about 4 weeks prepartum. Blood samples were taken periodically, and the collected plasma analyzed for concentrations of calcium, phosphorus, hydroxyproline and 1,25 dihydroxyergocalciferol plus 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol (1,25-(OH)2D). Cows fed the LCLP and LCHP diets, when compared to cows fed the HCLP diet, had: a) greater concentrations of plasma 1,25-(OH)2D and hydroxyproline prepartum; b) greater plasma calcium concentrations at parturition; and c) less incidence (0 versus 4 cases) of parturient paresis. Thus, low calcium diets, regardless of dietary phosphorus intake, seemed to activate calcium homeostatic mechanisms before parturition by stimulating both bone and gut. Cows fed the HCLP diet had greater plasma calcium concentrations at parturition than did cows fed the HCHP, even though there was no measurable effect on plasma 1,25-(OH)2D and hydroxyproline concentrations during the prepartal period. It seems possible that the beneficial effect of low dietary phosphorus, when dietary calcium is high, may be a result of a prepartal increase in efficiency of absorption of calcium and phosphorus from the gut caused by increased binding of 1,25-(OH)2D to intestinal receptors.
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PMID:Relationships between prepartal dietary calcium and phosphorus, vitamin D metabolism, and parturient paresis in dairy cows. 689 12

A comparative assessment was made of the hormonal control of calcium homeostasis in eight dairy cows which developed parturient paresis and in seven normal animals from the same herd. Plasma levels of calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, free hydroxyproline, 25-hydroxycholecalciferol (25-OHD), 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol (1,25-(OH)2D), parathyroid hormone, calcitonin, prolactin and oestrogen were monitored from 30 days prepartum to 15 days post partum. Prepartum levels of plasma calcium, hydroxyproline and calcitonin were depressed in the paretic animals, and plasma levels of phosphorus and oestrogen were elevated. Plasma levels of 25-OHD remained stable in both groups, whereas levels of 1,25-(OH)2D, parathyroid hormone and prolactin rose sharply at parturition. Plasma hydroxyproline, an index of bone resorption, began to rise 2 days prepartum in the control cows but not until 2 days post partum in the paretic cows. The data indicate that bone resorption was inhibited in the paretic group at the onset of lactation, and that a decreased capacity for bone resorption is a major factor in the susceptibility of some cows to this disease. The failure of the paretic animals to resorb bone was not associated with an inability to synthesize the calcium-mobilizing hormones parathyroid hormone or 1,25-(OH)2D, or to regulate the production of calcitonin. However, hypocalcaemia in the affected animals was associated with a significantly higher plasma level of oestrogen (a known inhibitor of bone resorption) in the immediate prepartum period. Following parturition, plasma levels of oestrogen fell rapidly and active bone resorption ensued in the paretic animals.
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PMID:A hormonal assessment of bovine parturient paresis: evidence for a role of oestrogen. 690 89

The concentrations of sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, sulphur and chlorine, in the skeletal muscle fibres of cows with parturient paresis, downer cows, normally calving cows and unmated heifers were determined by means of an X-ray microanalysis technique. The most consistent finding was an increase in the concentration of chlorine in the muscle samples from the downer cows. There were no other significant differences between the concentrations of these elements in samples from the different groups of cows, but the calcium concentration was higher in the muscle samples collected one month after parturition than in the samples collected close to parturition.
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PMID:Concentrations of sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium and chlorine in the muscle cells of downer cows and cows with parturient paresis. 797 93

Sixty-four cows with parturient paresis were given a standard treatment of 500 ml calcium gluconate (10.7 g Ca++) infusion solution. Twelve of these cows (experimental group = EG 1) additionally received 420 micrograms 1-alpha-hydroxycholecalciferol (1-alpha-OHD3) with 4 mg 25-hydroxycholecalciferol (25-OHD3) by the intramuscular route. A further 9 and 10 cows were given 210 micrograms 1-alpha-OHD3 and 2 mg 25-OHD3 (EG 3) with the calcium infusion, while 10 cows received either 420 micrograms 1-alpha-OHD3 (EG 4) or 210 micrograms 1-alpha-OHD3 (EG 5). Twenty-three cows (EG 2 and 4) which were given a calcium infusion alone acted as controls. The incidence of recurrence could not be reduced by the administration of Vitamin D3 metabolites concurrently with a calcium infusion, although calcium and phosphorus levels were higher between 24 and 48 hours after calcium infusion alone. The combination of 1-alpha-OHD3/25-OHD3 at the higher dosage resulted in the highest calcium levels.
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PMID:[The suitability of 1-alpha-hydroxycholecalciferol for the prevention of recurrent parturient paresis in dairy cows]. 847 Jan

Disorders of calcium, phosphorus and magnesium homeostasis in ruminants provide natural models for the study of the physiology and pathophysiology of these minerals. The knowledge that can be acquired with a better understanding of the pathogenesis of these diseases could give useful clues in the puzzle of human osteoporosis. In the present study, the case of parturient paresis of dairy cows is reexamined with a newly developed technique for the measurements of serum ionized magnesium concentrations (Mg2+). The concentrations of total magnesium (Mgtot), ionized calcium (Ca2+), total calcium (Catot), and inorganic phosphate (Pi) were also determined in the sera of seventeen 3- to 16-year-old Brown Swiss and crossed Simmental/Red Holstein cows during the periparturient period. In each animal, a transient increase of Mg2+ and Mgtot serum concentrations was observed in association with the transient decrease after parturition of Ca2+, Catot and Pi serum concentrations. On average, throughout the study, serum Mg2+ concentrations were 68.5% of those of Mgtot whereas serum Ca2+ concentrations were 52% of those of Catot. The possible mechanisms involved in the transient increase of Mg2+ and Mgtot serum concentrations are discussed and the relevance of this data for osteoporosis is outlined.
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PMID:Postparturient hypocalcemia of dairy cows: a model for the study of the interdependence of Ca, Pi, and Mg homeostasis. 857 48

Eleven late-pregnant Jersey cows were assigned to two groups; a group (PO-RBVD group) consisting of five cows treated with an oral administration of 10 million I.U. of an encapsulated form of vitamin D3 ("rumen-bypass" VD3; RBVD3) and another group (IMVD group) consisting of the other six treated with an intramuscular injection of 10 million I.U. of vitamin D3 (VD3). The cows received the RBVD3 or VD3 administration at 7 days before the expected parturition. The changes in the plasma concentrations of vitamin D metabolites, ionized Ca (Ca++) and inorganic phosphorus (iP) were evaluated. Of the vitamin D metabolites, the plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations in PO-RBVD group increased significantly after the RBVD3 administration and remained in high levels that were significantly higher than those in IMVD group. This suggested that RBVD3 was absorbed rapidly and excellently from the post-ruminal digestive tract without the degradation by ruminal microorganisms. The plasma Ca++ and iP concentrations in PO-RBVD group tended to be higher after the administration and around parturition than those in IMVD group. From these observations, it was suggested the oral RBVD3 administration had more potent ability to prevent parturient paresis compared with the VD3 injection used widely in Japan.
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PMID:Effects of oral administration of "rumen-bypass" vitamin D3 on vitamin D and calcium metabolism in periparturient cows. 1082 27


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