| Literature DB >> 31714134 |
Gert M Ferreira1, Inge-Marie Petzer.
Abstract
Mastitis is the most costly disease of dairy cows. A pro-active approach includes insuring adequate levels of selective trace minerals. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of two different commercially available, injectable selenium products, (sodium) Na-selenite (inorganic) and (selenium) Se-methionine (organic), on milk composition and on serum and milk selenium concentrations in high-yielding Holstein cows on total mix ration. Sixty multiparous cows were randomly selected into three groups of 20, one control group and two groups supplemented with injectable trace minerals. Blood and milk samples were collected over a period of 60 days. No specific change was indicated in milk yield, lactose, milk urea nitrogen (MUN) and milk pH levels compared with baseline values. The Se-methionine supplemented group showed a numerical increase in total milk protein percentage. In the group injected with Se-methionine, a negative correlation was present for the initial 72 hours between serum selenium concentration and somatic cell count (SCC) and a highly significant (p 0.001) increase in milk selenium concentration for the initial 24 hours. Serum selenium concentration of Se-methionine-supplemented cows was however not significantly changed. Injection of Na-selenite led to a 60-day initial increase in serum selenium concentration above baseline levels and a significant milk selenium concentration on day 1 but to a negative correlation between serum selenium concentration and SCC. Differences in serum and milk selenium concentrations followed with the use of organic and inorganic selenium injectables. Injectable Na-selenite, as selenium, can be of important value for cattle farmers if supplemented on strategically physiological periods to improve production, reproduction and immunity.Entities:
Keywords: Na-selenite; Se-methionine; dairy cows; injectable selenium; milk selenium, SCC; serum selenium; somatic cell count
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31714134 PMCID: PMC6852608 DOI: 10.4102/ojvr.v86i1.1664
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Onderstepoort J Vet Res ISSN: 0030-2465 Impact factor: 1.792
FIGURE 1Mean somatic cell count (×103 cells/mL milk) over time post selenium injection.
FIGURE 2Milk selenium means per day (mg/kg) for different treatment groups.
FIGURE 3Serum selenium means per day (mg/kg) for different treatment groups.
Percentage change compared with the baseline (0 time) in mean milk and serum selenium concentrations post injection of Na-selenite and Se-methionine.
| Time 0 (baseline) selenium levels | Na-selenite | Se-methionine | Na-selenite | Se-methionine |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 days | 51.50 | 867.00 | - | - |
| 1 days | 21.20 | 190.00 | 55.20 | −18.70 |
| 2 days | 18.00 | 19.30 | 104.10 | −38.00 |
| 3 days | 3.00 | 19.30 | 98.90 | −9.00 |
| 7 days | 12.00 | 19.70 | 91.60 | −7.14 |
| 14 days | 21.00 | 29.00 | 53.10 | −8.00 |
| 30 days | 12.10 | 19.30 | 40.60 | −14.60 |
| 60 days | 15.10 | 19.30 | 34.30 | −20.00 |
Na, sodium; Se, selenium.
, % Change of milk selenium levels from baseline concentration.
, % Change of serum selenium levels from baseline concentration.