Abstract

Previous observational studies have produced strong evidence that metritis alone has an impact on reproductive performance in dairy cows; but few studies have examined the combined effect of metritis and other postpartum diseases on reproduction performance in dairy cows. Information on the combined effects of postpartum diseases on fertility in dairy cows can have practical herd-health management implications. The objective of the study reported here was to examine the observed and expected combined effects of metritis and other postpartum diseases (retained fetal membranes (RFM), clinical hypocalcemia, left displaced abomasum, clinical mastitis, lameness) on time to conception and rate of conception failure in first-lactation cows up to 150 days postpartum. The study was conducted on two commercial dairy herds in Iran. Median number of days to conception was higher in 30 cows affected with metritis and RFM (90 days), compared to 287 healthy cows (57 days), 16 cows affected with RFM alone (60 days) or 44 cows affected with metritis alone (60 days), after controlling for herd and calving month (p < 0.05). In cows affected with metritis and RFM, the rate of conception failure was 3.8 times greater than that of healthy cows, after controlling for study herd and calving month (hazard ratio = 3.8; 95% CI = 2.3, 6.6; p < 0.01); this observed combined effect on conception failure was two times higher than the expected combined effect based on adding or multiplying absolute independent excesses due to metritis or RFM. In addition, we observed an interaction effect between metritis and lameness on conception failure, after controlling for herd, calving month, and RFM; but study results were inconclusive. In this study, the observed combined effect of metritis and RFM on time to conception and rate of conception failure was far in excess, compared to that in cows exposed to metritis or RFM alone. Attending veterinarians or farm managers can consider this information when making breeding and culling decisions on dairy farms.

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