Quantification of sleep in dairy cows in three different stages of lactation

The aim of this project was to quantify the total sleep time in modern dairy cows during 24-hour periods and to investigate whether the total amount of sleep as well as time spent in different sleep stages varies between the dry period, early- and peak lactation. The distribution of sleep time betwe...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Nilsson, Emma
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
sueco
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231) 2011
Materias:
_version_ 1855570524917202944
author Nilsson, Emma
author_browse Nilsson, Emma
author_facet Nilsson, Emma
author_sort Nilsson, Emma
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description The aim of this project was to quantify the total sleep time in modern dairy cows during 24-hour periods and to investigate whether the total amount of sleep as well as time spent in different sleep stages varies between the dry period, early- and peak lactation. The distribution of sleep time between night and day was also examined. Furthermore, correlations between sleep and lying time, fluctuations in body temperature and heart beat were included in the aim. Eight dairy cows of the Swedish Red breed were used in this study, which was carried out between June and September 2010. In order to quantify sleep non-invasive electrophysiological recordings were performed. Simultaneously with collecting sleep data, body position and body temperature were also recorded. No heart rate data was obtained due to difficulties of maintaining electrodes for heart beat measurements attached to the skin. One 24-hour data collection was performed on each cow in the three different stages of lactation. The electrophysiological data was visually scored according to definitions of human sleep. Electrophysiological data from one of the eight cows mainly contained artefacts and all her data was excluded from the data set. Shorter sleep time was obtained in early- and peak lactation compared with the dry period. The rapid eye movement (REM) sleep time and REM sleep time in proportion of total sleep was higher in peak lactation compared to early lactation. It could also be concluded that cows sleep during larger proportion of the night compared with the day. Indications of a possible correlation between total sleep time and total lying time was found, but no relationship between sleep and fluctuations in body temperature. Possible correlations between sleep and heart beat could not be investigated since no heart rate measurements was not obtained.
format H2
id RepoSLU3108
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
swe
publishDate 2011
publishDateSort 2011
publisher SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231)
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231)
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU31082012-04-20T14:21:49Z Quantification of sleep in dairy cows in three different stages of lactation Nilsson, Emma Sleep EEG Cow management Transition period The aim of this project was to quantify the total sleep time in modern dairy cows during 24-hour periods and to investigate whether the total amount of sleep as well as time spent in different sleep stages varies between the dry period, early- and peak lactation. The distribution of sleep time between night and day was also examined. Furthermore, correlations between sleep and lying time, fluctuations in body temperature and heart beat were included in the aim. Eight dairy cows of the Swedish Red breed were used in this study, which was carried out between June and September 2010. In order to quantify sleep non-invasive electrophysiological recordings were performed. Simultaneously with collecting sleep data, body position and body temperature were also recorded. No heart rate data was obtained due to difficulties of maintaining electrodes for heart beat measurements attached to the skin. One 24-hour data collection was performed on each cow in the three different stages of lactation. The electrophysiological data was visually scored according to definitions of human sleep. Electrophysiological data from one of the eight cows mainly contained artefacts and all her data was excluded from the data set. Shorter sleep time was obtained in early- and peak lactation compared with the dry period. The rapid eye movement (REM) sleep time and REM sleep time in proportion of total sleep was higher in peak lactation compared to early lactation. It could also be concluded that cows sleep during larger proportion of the night compared with the day. Indications of a possible correlation between total sleep time and total lying time was found, but no relationship between sleep and fluctuations in body temperature. Possible correlations between sleep and heart beat could not be investigated since no heart rate measurements was not obtained. SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231) 2011 H2 eng swe https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/3108/
spellingShingle Sleep
EEG
Cow management
Transition period
Nilsson, Emma
Quantification of sleep in dairy cows in three different stages of lactation
title Quantification of sleep in dairy cows in three different stages of lactation
title_full Quantification of sleep in dairy cows in three different stages of lactation
title_fullStr Quantification of sleep in dairy cows in three different stages of lactation
title_full_unstemmed Quantification of sleep in dairy cows in three different stages of lactation
title_short Quantification of sleep in dairy cows in three different stages of lactation
title_sort quantification of sleep in dairy cows in three different stages of lactation
topic Sleep
EEG
Cow management
Transition period