1984
DOI: 10.1136/vr.115.9.218
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Chronic udder oedema in milking cows and heifers

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1985
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Cited by 10 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Excess intake of Na + or K + , in high DCAD diets, may be the major cause of udder edema (Al Ani and Vestweber, 1986;Vestweber and Al Ani, 1983). The results were also in agreement with previous studies (Randall, 1974;Conway et al, 1977;Jones et al, 1984) who reported that high DCAD before parturition is the major cause of udder edema. Restriction of high DCAD diets to pregnant heifers reduces the severity of udder edema.…”
Section: Udder Edema and Mastitissupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Excess intake of Na + or K + , in high DCAD diets, may be the major cause of udder edema (Al Ani and Vestweber, 1986;Vestweber and Al Ani, 1983). The results were also in agreement with previous studies (Randall, 1974;Conway et al, 1977;Jones et al, 1984) who reported that high DCAD before parturition is the major cause of udder edema. Restriction of high DCAD diets to pregnant heifers reduces the severity of udder edema.…”
Section: Udder Edema and Mastitissupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Excess intake of Na or K (high DCAD diets) may be the major cause of udder edema (Al-Ani and Vestweber, 1986;Vestweber and Al Ani, 1983). Other researchers (Randall et al, 1974;Conway et al, 1977;Sanders and Sanders, 1981;Jones et al, 1984) also reported that high DCAD diet is the major cause of udder edema and its restriction to pregnant heifers reduce the severity of the problem. Occurrence of udder edema at high DCAD diet might be due to immune suppression in affected animals, manifested by increased plasma cortisol concentration (Littledike et al, 1970).…”
Section: Mastitis and Udder Edemamentioning
confidence: 96%
“…In an earlier study (Tauriainen et al 2001) dietary K content of 3.4% of DM was found to have no influence on the incidence of udder oedema, when the dietary K/(Ca + Mg) -ratio was low (1.1). Intake of Cl should be prevented from exceeding 195 g d -1 to avoid the risk of udder oedema (Jones et al 1984), as was the case in the present study (153 g d -1 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…This indicated that daily supplements of anionic salts (3.2 Eq) during the dry period did not increase the risk of udder oedema peripartum. High intakes of sodium chloride (Randell et al 1974, Jones et al 1984, Nestor et al 1988, potassium (Sanders and Sanders 1981) or a high ratio of potassium to calcium and magnesium have been shown to cause udder oedema peripartum (Sanders and Sanders 1982). In the current study sodium intake was 16 g per day, which approached published requirements of 12 g per day (Tuori et al 2001).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%