The Effect of Vitamin A Stores and Carotene Intake of Beef Cows on the Vitamin A Content of the Liver and Plasma of their Calves
- 1 November 1954
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Animal Science
- Vol. 13 (4) , 802-807
- https://doi.org/10.2527/jas1954.134802x
Abstract
Mobilization of stored vitamin A and carotene by lactating beef cows on a low plane of carotene intake was inadequate to provide sufficient vitamin A for their calves. Vitamin A content of milk, and to a lesser degree carotene, seem much more closely related to dietary carotene intake during lactation than to differential liver stores resulting from various levels of carotene intake prepartum. Supplementation of low carotene rations with 300 mg. of carotene per cow daily during lactation resulted in normal carotene and vitamin A levels in the plasma and livers of suckling calves. The rate of depletion of the liver stores of the cow during 5 months postpartum was also decreased.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Placental and Mammary Transfer of Vitamin A and Carotene by Beef CowsExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1953
- A LIVER BIOPSY TECHNIQUE FOR CATTLE1952
- The Effect of Crude Soybean Lecithin on the Absorption and Utilization of Vitamin A Fed Prepartum to the Ewe and SowJournal of Animal Science, 1949
- The Effect of Diet on the Vitamin A Content of the Bovine Fetal LiverJournal of Nutrition, 1943
- Minimum Vitamin A Requirements with Particular Reference to CattleJournal of Nutrition, 1935