Abstract

The responses of the mammary microvasculature in lactating goats (n = 8) during feed withdrawal (18-20 h) and mammary engorgement (26-28 h of milk accumulation) were compared using an indicator-dilution technique with FITC-albumin and [(14)C]sucrose as the intravascular and diffusible indicators, respectively. Feed withdrawal and mammary engorgement caused a 50-60% decrease in mammary arterial flow and in the permeability-surface area product (PS) values for sucrose. Only feed withdrawal increased the mean transit time [from 17.3 to 30.0 s, SE of the difference (SED) = 2.16, P < 0.01] of FITC-albumin, whereas only mammary engorgement reduced sucrose extraction (0.63 to 0.51, SED = 0.04, P < 0.05). Mammary engorgement also caused a substantial reduction in the sucrose-accessible extravascular space from 92 to 44 ml (SED = 15.2, P < 0.01). In a separate experiment using five goats, milking after mammary engorgement did not immediately restore arterial flow or sucrose extraction, indicating that the effect of milk accumulation was not mediated simply via increased intramammary pressure. In conclusion, feed withdrawal resulted in slower flow in the capillary bed but apparently no change in capillary recruitment, whereas mammary engorgement caused capillary derecruitment.

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