Comparison of two oestrus synchronisation protocols administered to dairy cows during routine reproduction services

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Standard

Comparison of two oestrus synchronisation protocols administered to dairy cows during routine reproduction services. / Viora, L; Denwood, M; Ellis, K; Carmichael, M Mihm; Geraghty, T.

I: Cattle Practice, Bind 23, Nr. 1, 01.2015, s. 33-38.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Viora, L, Denwood, M, Ellis, K, Carmichael, MM & Geraghty, T 2015, 'Comparison of two oestrus synchronisation protocols administered to dairy cows during routine reproduction services', Cattle Practice, bind 23, nr. 1, s. 33-38. <https://www.bcva.eu/cattle-practice/documents/3627>

APA

Viora, L., Denwood, M., Ellis, K., Carmichael, M. M., & Geraghty, T. (2015). Comparison of two oestrus synchronisation protocols administered to dairy cows during routine reproduction services. Cattle Practice, 23(1), 33-38. https://www.bcva.eu/cattle-practice/documents/3627

Vancouver

Viora L, Denwood M, Ellis K, Carmichael MM, Geraghty T. Comparison of two oestrus synchronisation protocols administered to dairy cows during routine reproduction services. Cattle Practice. 2015 jan.;23(1):33-38.

Author

Viora, L ; Denwood, M ; Ellis, K ; Carmichael, M Mihm ; Geraghty, T. / Comparison of two oestrus synchronisation protocols administered to dairy cows during routine reproduction services. I: Cattle Practice. 2015 ; Bind 23, Nr. 1. s. 33-38.

Bibtex

@article{9771be68fba04324b3e9e9de0c2e0cb5,
title = "Comparison of two oestrus synchronisation protocols administered to dairy cows during routine reproduction services",
abstract = "Progesterone-based oestrus synchronisation protocols are frequently used for treatment of cows presented for examination during routine reproduction management service. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of the addition of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) at the start of a progesterone-based oestrus synchronisation protocol for cows presented for examination during routine veterinary service on a commercial dairy farm over 10 months. Overall 139 animals were retained in the study, of which 78 received a standard progesterone-based treatment (STD) and 61 received the same treatment but with the addition of GnRH on day 0 (STD+). Cows were submitted for artificial insemination following observation of behavioural oestrus. Cow and service specific data were used to create two mixed effects generalised linear models to analyse the effect of treatment group on submission rate (SR) and conception rate (CR). In the final SR model lameness had a significant negative association (p=0.01) and STD+ had a non-significant positive association (p=0.12) with submission. In the final CR model only presence of a new CL at day 7 had a significant positive association (p=0.04) while previous reproductive disease had a non-significant positive association (p=0.83) with conception. These results highlight the difficulties in assessing the real effects of altering reproductive protocols on individual farms when other important explanatory variables are considered.",
author = "L Viora and M Denwood and K Ellis and Carmichael, {M Mihm} and T Geraghty",
year = "2015",
month = jan,
language = "English",
volume = "23",
pages = "33--38",
journal = "Cattle Practice",
issn = "0969-1251",
publisher = "British Cattle Veterinary Association",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Comparison of two oestrus synchronisation protocols administered to dairy cows during routine reproduction services

AU - Viora, L

AU - Denwood, M

AU - Ellis, K

AU - Carmichael, M Mihm

AU - Geraghty, T

PY - 2015/1

Y1 - 2015/1

N2 - Progesterone-based oestrus synchronisation protocols are frequently used for treatment of cows presented for examination during routine reproduction management service. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of the addition of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) at the start of a progesterone-based oestrus synchronisation protocol for cows presented for examination during routine veterinary service on a commercial dairy farm over 10 months. Overall 139 animals were retained in the study, of which 78 received a standard progesterone-based treatment (STD) and 61 received the same treatment but with the addition of GnRH on day 0 (STD+). Cows were submitted for artificial insemination following observation of behavioural oestrus. Cow and service specific data were used to create two mixed effects generalised linear models to analyse the effect of treatment group on submission rate (SR) and conception rate (CR). In the final SR model lameness had a significant negative association (p=0.01) and STD+ had a non-significant positive association (p=0.12) with submission. In the final CR model only presence of a new CL at day 7 had a significant positive association (p=0.04) while previous reproductive disease had a non-significant positive association (p=0.83) with conception. These results highlight the difficulties in assessing the real effects of altering reproductive protocols on individual farms when other important explanatory variables are considered.

AB - Progesterone-based oestrus synchronisation protocols are frequently used for treatment of cows presented for examination during routine reproduction management service. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of the addition of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) at the start of a progesterone-based oestrus synchronisation protocol for cows presented for examination during routine veterinary service on a commercial dairy farm over 10 months. Overall 139 animals were retained in the study, of which 78 received a standard progesterone-based treatment (STD) and 61 received the same treatment but with the addition of GnRH on day 0 (STD+). Cows were submitted for artificial insemination following observation of behavioural oestrus. Cow and service specific data were used to create two mixed effects generalised linear models to analyse the effect of treatment group on submission rate (SR) and conception rate (CR). In the final SR model lameness had a significant negative association (p=0.01) and STD+ had a non-significant positive association (p=0.12) with submission. In the final CR model only presence of a new CL at day 7 had a significant positive association (p=0.04) while previous reproductive disease had a non-significant positive association (p=0.83) with conception. These results highlight the difficulties in assessing the real effects of altering reproductive protocols on individual farms when other important explanatory variables are considered.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

SP - 33

EP - 38

JO - Cattle Practice

JF - Cattle Practice

SN - 0969-1251

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 169988299