Hyperglykemi hos kor med löpmagsdislokation

The main interest of this study was to investigate whether there is hyperglycemia or hypoglycemia in cows suffering from abomasal displacement and to evaluate the effect of transport on blood glucose. Thirty-six cows with left- or right-sided abomasal displacement were included in the study together...

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Autor principal: Haraldsen, Fredrik Mathias Weel
Formato: L3
Lenguaje:sueco
Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Ruminant Medicine and Veterinary Epidemiology 2004
Materias:
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author Haraldsen, Fredrik Mathias Weel
author_browse Haraldsen, Fredrik Mathias Weel
author_facet Haraldsen, Fredrik Mathias Weel
author_sort Haraldsen, Fredrik Mathias Weel
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description The main interest of this study was to investigate whether there is hyperglycemia or hypoglycemia in cows suffering from abomasal displacement and to evaluate the effect of transport on blood glucose. Thirty-six cows with left- or right-sided abomasal displacement were included in the study together with 17 cows with other diseases for comparison. Fifteen cows with abomasal displacement and 7 cows with other diseases were sampled before transport. One third of the cows with abomasal displacement had hyperglycemia when the transport effects were corrected for. Separating this group in left- and right-sided abomasal displacement we found significantly higher blood glucose and insulin levels among cows with right-sided abomasal displacement. An explanation for this difference may be a strong stress response secondary to the right-sided dislocation. Twenty-five percent of the cows were above available reference interval for fructosamine, indicating a long-term rise in blood glucose. This prolonged hyperglycemia may be a result of stress from other diseases prior to or concurrent with the abomasal displacement. Peripheral insulin resistance, however, may have contributed to these findings. A group of cows showed high b-hydroxybutyrate levels concurrent with elevated blood glucose, possibly indicating insulin resistance in liver cells and adipose tissue. There was a significant rise in blood glucose during transport, we also found that 6.0 mmol/l may be used as an upper limit for blood glucose in cases where only blood samples after transport are available. Results from the cows with other diseases were difficult to interpret because of their heterogeneity.
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id RepoSLU12732
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language swe
Inglés
publishDate 2004
publishDateSort 2004
publisher SLU/Dept. of Ruminant Medicine and Veterinary Epidemiology
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spelling RepoSLU127322017-10-19T12:06:20Z Hyperglykemi hos kor med löpmagsdislokation Haraldsen, Fredrik Mathias Weel mjölkkor löpmagsdislokation transport hyperglykemi The main interest of this study was to investigate whether there is hyperglycemia or hypoglycemia in cows suffering from abomasal displacement and to evaluate the effect of transport on blood glucose. Thirty-six cows with left- or right-sided abomasal displacement were included in the study together with 17 cows with other diseases for comparison. Fifteen cows with abomasal displacement and 7 cows with other diseases were sampled before transport. One third of the cows with abomasal displacement had hyperglycemia when the transport effects were corrected for. Separating this group in left- and right-sided abomasal displacement we found significantly higher blood glucose and insulin levels among cows with right-sided abomasal displacement. An explanation for this difference may be a strong stress response secondary to the right-sided dislocation. Twenty-five percent of the cows were above available reference interval for fructosamine, indicating a long-term rise in blood glucose. This prolonged hyperglycemia may be a result of stress from other diseases prior to or concurrent with the abomasal displacement. Peripheral insulin resistance, however, may have contributed to these findings. A group of cows showed high b-hydroxybutyrate levels concurrent with elevated blood glucose, possibly indicating insulin resistance in liver cells and adipose tissue. There was a significant rise in blood glucose during transport, we also found that 6.0 mmol/l may be used as an upper limit for blood glucose in cases where only blood samples after transport are available. Results from the cows with other diseases were difficult to interpret because of their heterogeneity. SLU/Dept. of Ruminant Medicine and Veterinary Epidemiology 2004 L3 swe eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/12732/
spellingShingle mjölkkor
löpmagsdislokation
transport
hyperglykemi
Haraldsen, Fredrik Mathias Weel
Hyperglykemi hos kor med löpmagsdislokation
title Hyperglykemi hos kor med löpmagsdislokation
title_full Hyperglykemi hos kor med löpmagsdislokation
title_fullStr Hyperglykemi hos kor med löpmagsdislokation
title_full_unstemmed Hyperglykemi hos kor med löpmagsdislokation
title_short Hyperglykemi hos kor med löpmagsdislokation
title_sort hyperglykemi hos kor med löpmagsdislokation
topic mjölkkor
löpmagsdislokation
transport
hyperglykemi