Abstract

Twenty-four lactating dairy cows, averaging 30.0kg/d of milk and 159 d of lactation, were used to study the effect of feed intake and growth hormone-releasing factor in a 2×2 factorial arrangement. For the first 10-d period, cows had free access to a TMR and received a fixed amount of high moisture corn, protein supplement, and hay. In the second 10-d period, 12 cows were maintained on this high intake, and 12 cows received 70% of their previous intake (low intake). During the following 10-d period, each intake group was divided, and each of two subgroups (n=6) received twice daily s.c. injections of saline or growth hormone-releasing factor (10μg/kg of BW per injection). Feed restriction decreased milk production by 24%. Milk production increase was not different following growth hormone-releasing factor treatment for cows maintained at high intake (4.6kg/d) or low intake (3.4kg/d). Feed restriction increased concentration of growth hormone but did not affect IGF-I concentration. Growth hormone-releasing factor increased IGF-I concentration similarly for both intake groups but increased concentrations of insulin and IGF-binding proteins-1 and -3 only in the high intake group. Low intake did not affect growth hormone, IGF-I, or milk responses to growth hormone-releasing factor, but suppressed the increase in concentrations of insulin and IGF-binding proteins-1 and -3 following treatment with growth hormone-releasing factor for cows on high intake.

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