Changes in freezing point of blood and milk during dehydration and rehydration in lactating cows

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Changes in freezing point of blood and milk during dehydration and rehydration in lactating cows. / Bjerg, M.; Rasmussen, M.D.; Nielsen, Mette Olaf.

I: Journal of Dairy Science, Bind 88, Nr. 9, 2005, s. 3174-3185.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Bjerg, M, Rasmussen, MD & Nielsen, MO 2005, 'Changes in freezing point of blood and milk during dehydration and rehydration in lactating cows', Journal of Dairy Science, bind 88, nr. 9, s. 3174-3185.

APA

Bjerg, M., Rasmussen, M. D., & Nielsen, M. O. (2005). Changes in freezing point of blood and milk during dehydration and rehydration in lactating cows. Journal of Dairy Science, 88(9), 3174-3185.

Vancouver

Bjerg M, Rasmussen MD, Nielsen MO. Changes in freezing point of blood and milk during dehydration and rehydration in lactating cows. Journal of Dairy Science. 2005;88(9):3174-3185.

Author

Bjerg, M. ; Rasmussen, M.D. ; Nielsen, Mette Olaf. / Changes in freezing point of blood and milk during dehydration and rehydration in lactating cows. I: Journal of Dairy Science. 2005 ; Bind 88, Nr. 9. s. 3174-3185.

Bibtex

@article{e8004460a1bf11ddb6ae000ea68e967b,
title = "Changes in freezing point of blood and milk during dehydration and rehydration in lactating cows",
abstract = "We studied the influence of short-term changes in water intake in 4 lactating Holstein cows on diurnal fluctuation of packed cell volume (PCV), freezing point of blood (FP blood), freezing point of milk ( FP milk), and the relationship between changes in FP blood and FP milk. The experiment lasted 108 h and was divided into 3 periods: 1) control (38 h); 2) dehydration/rehydration with 4 consecutive 12-h sequences: 8 h without water, 0.5-h access to water, 1.5 h without water, and 2-h access to water; and (3) 22 h for reconstitution. Cows were milked at 12-h intervals. Blood was sampled from the jugular vein hourly throughout the experiment, and at 0, 15, 30, 60, 90, 120, 150, 180, 210, and 240 min after initiated rehydration following the 8-h dehydration sequences. Intakes of free water and water in feed were recorded every hour. The PCV was negatively affected by water intake within the hour before sampling. Dehydration lowered FP blood steadily, whereas FP blood increased by 0.024°C within 30 min following a large water intake in the rehydration period. The FP blood was not significantly influenced by actual water intake, but was highly correlated with the available water pool at time of blood sampling. The FP milk correlated positively with the FP blood collected 1 h before milk sampling, indicating a delay in the transfer of water from plasma to milk. In summary, FP blood and FP milk decrease during dehydration and increase during rehydration. Rehydration following a long dehydration period caused and increase in FP milk within 1 h, but not above the initial level for FP milk of the cow.",
keywords = "Former LIFE faculty, freezing point, blood, milk, packed cell volume",
author = "M. Bjerg and M.D. Rasmussen and Nielsen, {Mette Olaf}",
year = "2005",
language = "English",
volume = "88",
pages = "3174--3185",
journal = "Journal of Dairy Science",
issn = "0022-0302",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Changes in freezing point of blood and milk during dehydration and rehydration in lactating cows

AU - Bjerg, M.

AU - Rasmussen, M.D.

AU - Nielsen, Mette Olaf

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - We studied the influence of short-term changes in water intake in 4 lactating Holstein cows on diurnal fluctuation of packed cell volume (PCV), freezing point of blood (FP blood), freezing point of milk ( FP milk), and the relationship between changes in FP blood and FP milk. The experiment lasted 108 h and was divided into 3 periods: 1) control (38 h); 2) dehydration/rehydration with 4 consecutive 12-h sequences: 8 h without water, 0.5-h access to water, 1.5 h without water, and 2-h access to water; and (3) 22 h for reconstitution. Cows were milked at 12-h intervals. Blood was sampled from the jugular vein hourly throughout the experiment, and at 0, 15, 30, 60, 90, 120, 150, 180, 210, and 240 min after initiated rehydration following the 8-h dehydration sequences. Intakes of free water and water in feed were recorded every hour. The PCV was negatively affected by water intake within the hour before sampling. Dehydration lowered FP blood steadily, whereas FP blood increased by 0.024°C within 30 min following a large water intake in the rehydration period. The FP blood was not significantly influenced by actual water intake, but was highly correlated with the available water pool at time of blood sampling. The FP milk correlated positively with the FP blood collected 1 h before milk sampling, indicating a delay in the transfer of water from plasma to milk. In summary, FP blood and FP milk decrease during dehydration and increase during rehydration. Rehydration following a long dehydration period caused and increase in FP milk within 1 h, but not above the initial level for FP milk of the cow.

AB - We studied the influence of short-term changes in water intake in 4 lactating Holstein cows on diurnal fluctuation of packed cell volume (PCV), freezing point of blood (FP blood), freezing point of milk ( FP milk), and the relationship between changes in FP blood and FP milk. The experiment lasted 108 h and was divided into 3 periods: 1) control (38 h); 2) dehydration/rehydration with 4 consecutive 12-h sequences: 8 h without water, 0.5-h access to water, 1.5 h without water, and 2-h access to water; and (3) 22 h for reconstitution. Cows were milked at 12-h intervals. Blood was sampled from the jugular vein hourly throughout the experiment, and at 0, 15, 30, 60, 90, 120, 150, 180, 210, and 240 min after initiated rehydration following the 8-h dehydration sequences. Intakes of free water and water in feed were recorded every hour. The PCV was negatively affected by water intake within the hour before sampling. Dehydration lowered FP blood steadily, whereas FP blood increased by 0.024°C within 30 min following a large water intake in the rehydration period. The FP blood was not significantly influenced by actual water intake, but was highly correlated with the available water pool at time of blood sampling. The FP milk correlated positively with the FP blood collected 1 h before milk sampling, indicating a delay in the transfer of water from plasma to milk. In summary, FP blood and FP milk decrease during dehydration and increase during rehydration. Rehydration following a long dehydration period caused and increase in FP milk within 1 h, but not above the initial level for FP milk of the cow.

KW - Former LIFE faculty

KW - freezing point

KW - blood

KW - milk

KW - packed cell volume

M3 - Journal article

VL - 88

SP - 3174

EP - 3185

JO - Journal of Dairy Science

JF - Journal of Dairy Science

SN - 0022-0302

IS - 9

ER -

ID: 7997387