Over the past decade, there’s been a lot of research and discussion about the importance of managing periparturient dairy cows to reduce the incidence of hypocalcaemia. Some work substantiated what we already knew, other work expanded our foundation of understanding, and some work investigated newer strategies. From all these studies, several key points of understanding were gained.
A Trusted Approach
While there are still some varying opinions as how to best formulate an acidogenic diet (level of DCAD; dietary level of calcium and phosphorus), one thing is certain: feeding an acidogenic diet is by far the most research proven strategy to help improve the postpartum calcium status in cows and the one most implemented on today’s dairy farms, and for good reason.
Feeding an acidogenic diet to prepartum dairy cows results in positive impacts on calcium metabolism, which can result in greater dietary calcium absorption by intestinal tissue and release of calcium from bone, providing more “available” calcium to the cow. In other words, working with the cow’s primary mechanisms of calcium regulation for maintaining normal blood calcium concentrations.
Research has shown that feeding an acidogenic diet to prepartum dairy cows can lead to:
A Closer Look at a New Strategy
A new strategy takes a different approach using phosphorus regulation, not calcium regulation, to raise blood calcium concentrations. This strategy relies on feeding a phosphorus deficient diet, either through feeding phosphorus below dietary requirement or by the addition of a phosphorus binding agent, to induce resorption of phosphorus from bone. Since phosphorus and calcium are bound together to form the matrix of bone tissue, the breakdown of bone tissue releases both minerals into circulation.
While this strategy can support a short-term supply of calcium and help keep blood calcium concentrations high around calving, a closer look reveals why it is not the best approach to managing calcium status in periparturient cows.
As mentioned, feeding a phosphorus deficient diet raises blood calcium concentrations through a secondary mechanism. Studies have demonstrated that this strategy results in below-normal blood (0.95 mmol/L) and salivary phosphorus (5.53 mmol/L) concentrations.4 Once the rapidly available pool of phosphorus from blood and saliva is depleted, the cow must mobilise bone to reverse the severe phosphorus deficiency, replete blood and salivary concentrations, and meet the need for phosphorus deposition into milk.
Research has shown that feeding a prepartum diet deficient in phosphorus can result in:
As the competitive pressures to produce milk more inexpensively increase and place greater demands on dairy farm economic performance, using proven technologies that result in a return on investment is critical. Outside of milk production, no other measured and monitored cow health or performance indicator influenced by dietary nutrient intake is more scrutinised than measures of hypocalcaemia (both clinical and subclinical). Like with all decisions, many factors need to be considered. However, when research and farm-tested strategies that also provide a return on investment are available, the choice is simple: feed the strategy that does more.
References:
1 Leno et al., 2017. J Dairy Sci. 100:4604.
2 Glosson et al., 2020. J Dairy Sci. 103:7039.
3 Ryan et al., 2020. Theriogenology. 142:338.
4 Frizzarini et al., 2024. J Dairy Sci. 107:5204.
5 Kerwin et al., 2019. J Dairy Sci. 102:5191.
6 Thilsing-Hansen et al., 2002. J Dairy Sci. 85:1855.
7 Frizzarini et al., 2024. J Dairy Sci. 107:5222.
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