Article (Scientific journals)
Tolerance to bovine clinical mastitis: Total, direct, and indirect milk losses
Detilleux, Johann
2018In Journal of Dairy Science
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Keywords :
Counterfactual; Health trajectory; Mastitis; Mediation; Tolerance
Abstract :
[en] The objectives of this paper were to estimate direct and indirect milk losses associated with mastitis. Indirect losses, linked to indirect tolerance, are mediated by the increase in milk somatic cell count (SCC) in response to bacterial infection. Direct losses, linked to weak direct tolerance, are not mediated by the increase in SCC. So far, studies have evaluated milk loss associated with clinical mastitis without considering both components, which may lead to biased estimates of their sum; that is, the total loss in milk. A total of 43,903 test-day records on milk and SCC from 3,716 cows and 5,858 lactations were analyzed with mediation mixed models and health trajectories to estimate the amount of direct, indirect, and total milk losses after adjustment for known and potentially unmeasured (sensitivity analyses) confounding factors. Estimates were formalized under the counterfactual causal theory of causation. In this study, milk losses were mostly mediated by an increase in SCC. They were highest in the first month of lactation, when SCC were highest. Milk losses were estimated at 0.5, 0.8, and 1.1 kg/d in first, second, and third and greater parity, respectively. Two phases described how changes in milk were associated with changes in SCC: on average, one occurred before and one after the day preceding the clinical diagnosis. In both phases, changes in milk were estimated at 1 mg/d per 103 cells/mL. After adjusting for known confounders, cow effect accounted for 20.7 and 64.2% of the variation in milk in the first and second phases, respectively. This suggests that deviations from the resilient path were highest during the second phase of inflammation and that selection for cows more tolerant to mastitis is feasible. As discussed herein, epigenetic regulation of macrophage polarization may contribute to the variation in milk observed in the second phase. © 2018 American Dairy Science Association.
Disciplines :
Animal production & animal husbandry
Author, co-author :
Detilleux, Johann ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des productions animales (DPA) > Génétique quantitative
Language :
English
Title :
Tolerance to bovine clinical mastitis: Total, direct, and indirect milk losses
Publication date :
2018
Journal title :
Journal of Dairy Science
ISSN :
0022-0302
eISSN :
1525-3198
Publisher :
Elsevier Inc.
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 06 October 2020

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