Joosten, I., Van Eldik, P., Elving, L. and Van der Mey, G.J.W., 1987. Factors related to the etiology of retained placenta in dairy cattle. Anim. Reprod. Sci., Birth records of 369 288 calvings of 160 188 Meuse-Rhine-Yssel cows were analysed to assess the influence of factors associated with retained placenta. Special emphasis was placed on the analysis of a subset containing data on births involving a single live calf and an easy or normal calving process. The overall rate of incidence of retained placenta was 6.6%. The rate increased during the years studied. Abortion, stillbirth and multiple birth caused a marked increase in rate, as did difficult calving, caesarean section and fetotomy. After adjusting for these factors, analysis of the corrected subset showed that the rate of incidence increased with age of the dam. Gestation length prior to retention and birth weight were also associated with higher rates. The combination of short gestation length ( < 270 days) and low birth weight ( < 37 kg) was associated with the highest risk of retained placenta. High birth weights mainly caused higher rates when related to dystocia. The incidence rate in cows delivering a male calf was only slightly higher than in cows delivering a female calf. Cows having retained placenta for a first or second time were three and six times, respectively, as likely to do so again at a subsequent parturition when compared with cows which had not had retained placenta previously.
This study provided evidence that the conformation trait uneven feet has a negative effect on Warmblood jumping performance and, therefore, breeders should be encouraged to avoid this phenomenon at foal age.
The effect of the indurative lymphocytic mastitis caused by infection with maedi-visna virus was quantified by comparing the pre-weaning growth of lambs from infected and uninfected ewes under the same conditions. A total of 73 infected, but clinically healthy, ewes and 75 ewes from a maedi-visna virus-free source were purchased to form a new flock; they were all three years old. The ewes were mated and the flock was managed as a normal field flock. Serum samples were taken at regular intervals and tested for antibodies to maedi-visna virus. The lambs were weighed at birth and at 14, 30, 50 and, finally, 80 days old, when they were weaned. The ewes were slaughtered, their udders were examined histologically, and the lesions were assessed by counting the typical lymphocytic follicles. Sixty-six per cent of the ewes that were seropositive at slaughter appeared to have follicles. A statistically significant association was found between the number of follicles in the udder and the reduction in the growth rate of the lambs. Lambs from ewes with the mean number of follicles weighed 1.7 kg less at weaning.
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