Epidemiology of Metabolic Disorders in the Periparturient Dairy Cow
Open Access
- 1 September 1988
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Dairy Science Association in Journal of Dairy Science
- Vol. 71 (9) , 2557-2571
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(88)79845-8
Abstract
The descriptive epidemiology and risk factors were reviewed for six clinical disorders: milk fever, downer cow syndrome, hypomagnesemic tetany, udder edema, left displaced abomasum, and ketosis. Data were included also from preliminary analyses of a data set from approximately 61,000 Finnish Ayrshire cows. A web of postulated associations among the metabolic disorders and other risks factors (previous lactation diseases and milk yield, calf factors, certain dry period nutritional factors, dystocia, retained placenta, and metritis) was diagrammed.This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clinical Puerperal Paresis and Hypocalcaemia in Cattle A Statistical and Genetic InvestigationZentralblatt für Veterinärmedizin Reihe A, 2010
- Disease frequencies in dairy cows in Sweden. IV. ketosisPreventive Veterinary Medicine, 1987
- Disease frequencies in dairy cows in Sweden. III. Parturient paresisPreventive Veterinary Medicine, 1987
- Downer cow occurrence in Minnesota dairy herdsPreventive Veterinary Medicine, 1986
- Epidemiology and genetic basis of ketosis in Finnish Ayrshire cattlePreventive Veterinary Medicine, 1984
- Disease, production and culling in Holstein-Friesian cows III. Disease and production as determinants of diseasePreventive Veterinary Medicine, 1984
- Disease, production and culling in Holstein-Friesian cows II. Age, season and sire effectsPreventive Veterinary Medicine, 1984
- THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN CLINICAL DISEASE, PRODUCTION AND CULLING OF HOLSTEIN-FRIESIAN COWSCanadian Journal of Animal Science, 1982
- Clinical and biochemical responses to the treatment of milk feverVeterinary Record, 1975
- PARTURIENT PARESIS (MILK FEVER) OF COWS: 1. The Response to Treatment and the Effect of the Duration of SymptomsAustralian Veterinary Journal, 1969