Genre
- Journal Article
A clinical trial was carried out in two provinces of Canada (Prince Edward Island and Quebec) to investigate the effect of treatment with eprinomectin at calving on production parameters in adult dairy cattle in 1999-2000. One of the objectives of this study was to evaluate the impact of treatment on reproductive performance as measured by: calving-to-conception interval, calving-to-first service interval and number of services per conception. The ability of an indirect ELISA using a crude adult Ostertagia ostertagi antigen to predict response to treatment also was evaluated. All lactating cows in 20 dairy herds were allocated randomly to receive either eprinomectin pour-on or placebo at calving. Information on reproductive parameters was obtained from computerized cow records. Survival models were used to evaluate the effect of treatment on the two intervals and a Poisson model was used to evaluate the number of services to conception. A total of 549 cows were included in these analyses. A marginally significant treatment effect on calving-to-conception interval was observed (hazard ratio=1.24, P=0.06) but not on calving-to-first service interval. A significant reduction in the number of breedings to conception for treated animals also was observed with a longer effect in cows with short interval to first service. Milk samples from a subset of 109 late-lactation cows were tested for antibodies against O. ostertagi. The ELISA optical-density ratio (ODR) values obtained between 120 days before calving and drying off were categorized as high ODR (>=0.5) and low ODR (<0.5). Among untreated animals, the hazard of conception was lower (hazard ratio=0.38, 95% CI=[0.19, 0.75]) for high-ODR cows compared to low ODR cows suggesting that higher parasite burdens had an adverse effect on reproductive performance. Treated high-ODR cows had a hazard of conception equivalent to the hazard for all cows in the low-ODR group (indicating that treatment prevented the negative effect associated with these higher parasite burdens)..
Department of Health Management, Atlantic Veterinary College, University of Prince Edward Island, 550 University Avenue, Charlottetown, PEI C1A 4P3, Canada.
Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier Science B.V..
RE: 30 ref.; RN: 123997-26-2; SC: 0I; 0V; 0A; 0D; VE; CA; BE; ZA; AA; XURL: E-MAIL; DOI; DIGITAL-OBJECT-IDENTIFIER
Source type: Electronic(1)
jsanchez@upei.ca; http://upei-resolver.asin-risa.ca?sid=SP:CABI&id=pmid:&id=doi%3a10.1016%2fS0167-5877%2802%2900118-6&issn=0167-5877&isbn=&volume=56&issue=2&spage=165&pages=165-177&date=2002&title=Preventive%20Veterinary%20Medicine&atitle=The%20effect%20of%20eprinomectin%20treatment%20at%20calving%20on%20reproduction%20parameters%20in%20adult%20dairy%20cows%20in%20Canada.&aulast=Sanchez&pid=%3Cauthor%3ESanchez%2c%20J%3bNodtvedt%2c%20A%3bDohoo%2c%20I%3bDesCoteaux%2c%20L%3C%2Fauthor%3E%3CAN%3E20023181956%3C%2FAN%3E%3CDT%3EJournal%20article%3C%2FDT%3E
Language
- English
Subjects
- Drug therapy
- ruminants
- Canada
- animals
- Animal Reproduction and Embryology
- Trichostrongylidae
- North America
- eprinomectin
- cows
- calving
- America
- Commonwealth of Nations
- reproductive performance
- conception
- Chordata
- Ostertagia
- Veterinary Pharmacology and Anaesthesiology
- dairy cattle
- Artiodactyla
- OECD Countries
- Bovidae
- Nematoda
- Prince Edward Island
- ungulates
- Developed Countries
- mammals
- Ostertagia ostertagi
- Quebec
- vertebrates
- invertebrates
- Dairy Animals
- Bos
- cattle