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  • Title: Short communication: Effect of glucose infusion dose and stage of lactation on glucose tolerance test kinetics in lactating dairy cows.
    Author: Malacco VMR, Erickson M, Cardoso FF, Biese BP, Laguna JG, Donkin SS.
    Journal: J Dairy Sci; 2020 Aug; 103(8):7547-7554. PubMed ID: 32475657.
    Abstract:
    The objective for this study was to determine the effect of glucose dose and days following peak milk yield on plasma glucose, serum insulin, and plasma nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA) kinetics during an intravenous glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) in lactating dairy cattle. Six lactating Holstein dairy cows (3 primiparous and 3 multiparous) were assigned to 2 squares and received 0.092, 0.15, or 0.3 g of glucose/kg of body weight (BW) during an IVGTT at 74 and 221 d in milk (DIM), representing early (post-peak) lactation and mid lactation, respectively. Treatments were applied in a replicated Latin square design using contiguous 7-d periods within each stage of lactation. Milk production and dry matter intake were determined daily during the first 6 d of each period. The IVGTT was performed on d 7. For the IVGTT, cows were prepared with indwelling catheters in each jugular vein, and blood samples were collected at -15, -10, 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, 45, 60, 90, and 120 min relative to the glucose infusion. Samples were analyzed for plasma glucose, serum insulin, and plasma NEFA concentrations. Increasing the glucose dose during the IVGTT increased plasma glucose area under the curve (AUC), decreased glucose half-life, and increased maximal plasma glucose concentrations in plasma during the IVGTT. Greater glucose dose during the IVGTT elevated serum insulin AUC and increased nadir NEFA concentrations. Maximal plasma glucose concentration during the IVGTT was lower, whereas maximum NEFA concentration, NEFA AUC, and NEFA clearance rate were greater at 74 than at 221 DIM. Only glucose half-life was responsive to stage of lactation × glucose dose effects during the IVGTT, and the decrease in glucose half-life with increasing glucose dose was greater at 74 than at 221 DIM. Glucose AUC was greater and NEFA AUC lower for cows at 74 than at 221 DIM. For the doses tested, a glucose dose greater than 0.092 g/kg of BW resulted in peak blood glucose concentration that exceeded the previously reported renal glucose excretion threshold of 8.3 mM. There is a need for accompanying data to determine if this is the case for the glucose doses evaluated in this experiment. Based on maximal peak glucose concentrations and effects on glucose half-life, we identify 0.092 g of glucose/kg of BW (0.46 g/kg of metabolic body weight) as the preferred dose for the IVGTT for cows at 74 and 221 DIM in this study.
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