Abstract

Pregnancy toxaemia is a metabolic disorder with a high mortality rate and occurs in twin-bearing ewes in late gestation. Maternal hypoglycaemia is a characteristic symptom of the disease and has been attributed to an increase in glucose uptake by the twin-bearing uterus. The possibility that a reduced maternal glucose production rate might cause hypoglycaemia, has received little attention in the past. It was the aim of this study to investigate this explanation as a possible alternative. Six ewes were sequentially subjected to two types of hypoglycaemic stress, firstly by fasting for 14 h and secondly through induction of moderate hyperketonaemia. Glucose kinetics were assessed in each animal during the dry non-gestational period, during late gestation, and during early lactation. Application of these stress factors was associated with variation of plasma glucose concentration from 4.9 to 0.87 mmol L −1. The plasma glucose concentration was always significantly related to the glucose production rate. The greatest stress-induced reductions in glucose concentration and glucose production rate were seen during late gestation in twin-bearing ewes. The decline in the glucose production rate after an overnight fast and during induced hyperketonaemia was greater in twin-bearing ewes than in single-bearing ewes (59% and 43%, respectively, p < 0.05). The stress conditions resulted in the lowest levels of glucose concentration and glucose turnover rates in the stressed, hyperketonaemic, late gestation twin-bearing ewes. This illustrates that the glucose homoeostatic system of ewes bearing twins is significantly more susceptible to hypoglycaemic stress than that of ewes bearing single lambs. These findings also show that the primary cause of hypoglycaemia in late gestation twin-pregnant ewes is an increased susceptibility to a stress related reduction in glucose production rate. This metabolic condition leaves the twin-pregnant ewe predisposed for the development of pregnancy toxaemia.

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