Neonatal Ruminants: Initial Mgmt & Clinical Investigations (Ch 19) Flashcards
What is the immunoglobulin concentration and differential of Ig types in bovine colostrum?
What is the leukocyte concentration in bovine colostrum?
45 mg/ml immunoglobulin (95% of the whey protein)
- 80% IgG1
- 10% IgG2
- 7% IgA
- 5% IgM
1 million leukocytes/ml
What type of placenta do all ruminants have?
Cotyledonary - multiple discrete areas of attachment
Epitheliochorial - All 6 layers retained!
How and when do the intestines absorb colostrum and “close” after birth?
Enterocytes selectively absorb Ig via pinocytosis in the 1st 24 hrs
“Closure” occurs by 24 to 36 hrs postpatrum and is mediated by growth factors (IGF-1, TGF-2ß, and GH) in the colostrum causing hyperplasia of intestinal epithelium and decr crypt-to-villus ratio (shift towards mature enterocytes)
How much colostrum should calves receive and when to achieve optimal IgG transfer?
7.5% to 10% of BW (minimum of 150g IgG) within 2 hours of birth
What are the 4 major factors influencing the effectiveness of passive transfer of immunoglobulins in calves?
1) Concentration of immunoglobulin
2) Volume of colostrum ingested
3) Age of the calf at 1st colostral feeding
4) bacterial load of the colostrum ingested
What are factors that affect colostrum qualtiy/concentration?
- **Colostral Volume/weight
- **Time from calving until milking (IgG is reabsorbed)
- No consistent breed differences
- 1st/2nd calving cows vs 3rd or greater parity
- Complete elimination of a dry period
- Clinical mastitis
- Higher in summer (unless heat stressed)