The inseminating bull and plasma pregnancy-associated glycoprotein (PAG) levels were related to peripheral leukocyte counts during the late pregnancy/early postpartum period in high-producing dairy cows

2012 
Abstract It has been established that the immunologic and endocrine status of the peripartum dairy cow determines the animal's subsequent productive and reproductive performance. Thus, at parturition reduced immune functions of peripheral blood polymorphonuclear cells (PMN) has been observed after a peak in pregnancy-associated glycoproteins (PAGs), and, more recently, the inseminating bull was linked to plasma levels of bovine PAGs in pregnant Holstein-Friesian dairy cows. The present study sought to determine whether changes in leukocyte counts during the peripartum period, indicative of the animal's immune status, could be related to the inseminating bull and to PAG levels. Ninety-six clinically healthy, single pregnant cows in a commercial dairy herd were selected. Four samples were collected before parturition (on gestation Days 220–226, 234–240, 248–254, and 262–268) and two samples after parturition (on Days 14–21, and 28–34 postpartum) to analyze total and differential blood cell counts. Based on GLM analysis procedures of variance for repeated measures, the inseminating bull was found to affect counts of total leukocytes and lymphocytes (P 900 ng/ml) on Day 262–268 of gestation had higher numbers of total leukocytes and neutrophils throughout the peripartum (P
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