Diarrhea, which is one of the most important problems of cattle breeding in the world, is most common in calves in the neonatal period [1]. The neonatal period is used to define the 28 days following birth and is the period in which the most intense diseases and deaths occur in calves. Diseases occurring in calves during this period cause significant economic losses. These economic losses are the cost of treatment, loss of yield, and decrease in potential breeding stock, as well as newborn calf deaths [2][3][4]. It is known that many factors and factors play a role in the etiology of neonatal calf diarrhea. The most important of these are negative environmental factors, maternal reasons, unsuitable care/feeding conditions, and the calf's inability to receive colostrum. In addition, the main parasitic, viral, fungal, and bacterial agents among infectious agents constitute the source of neonatal diarrhea [5][6][7][8].Oxidative stress is defined as an imbalance between the number of antioxidants and reactive oxygen species or reactive nitrogen species in a biological system. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) are byproducts of various cellular processes, including aerobic metabolism. For example, nitric oxide (NO•), which is an RNS, is produced from 1-arginine by nitric oxide synthase and then reacts with superoxide (O2•-) to form peroxynitrite (ONOO-) [9-12]. These reactive oxygen/nitrogen species (RONS), that is, hydroxyl, superoxide anion, nitric oxide, and nitrosyl anion molecules, are highly reactive due to their unpaired valence electrons [10]. Normally, RONS have involved in cell signaling (redox signaling) pathways, thiol switches, regulation of inflammatory cytokines, growth factors, etc. They have important biological roles in many cellular events such as [13].