Abstract

The associations between early lactation changes of the body condition score (BCS) and mid-lactation levels of blood insulin like Growth Factor-I (IGF-1), prolactin, insulin, non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), milk production and some reproductive indices were investigated. Monthly milk yield and BCS were recorded. Blood samples were collected on days 60, 90 and 120 (±5 days) of lactation. Twelve and 17 cows showed BCS losses ≤0.75 and >0.75 on day 60, respectively. BCS losses ≤0.75 till d60 after calving enhanced the IGF-I concentration on d90 (57.8±10.7 vs 35.6±17.8 ng/ml; P=0.001). The differences of blood metabolites were prominent on d90. Trends of insulin changes between d60 BCS (P=0.04) groups were different. Inverse correlations were detected between IGF-I and NEFA (-0.6, P=0.001), IGF-I and milk production (-0.4, P=0.05), NEFA and prolactin (-0.8, P<0.001) on d90. Higher percentages of cows with BCS loss >0.75 (d60) showed their first heat after d40 postpartum. In conclusion, irrespective of BCS at the time of breeding, the level of BCS loss during the first 60 days of lactation may affect further reproductive performance due to prolonged alterations of IGF-I, NEFA, prolactin and insulin levels. The extent of postpartum BCS loss may be a predictor of metabolic status of cows during mid-lactation.

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