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Papers and Articles |
1 Department of Veterinary Clinical Science, University of Liverpool Veterinary
Teaching Hospital, Leahurst, Neston, Cheshire CH64 7TE
2 Core Technology Facility, University of Manchester Faculty of Life Sciences,
46 Grafton Street, Manchester M13 9NT
Milk fever has been recognised in cattle for about 215 years and its
clinical signs have not changed since they were described by Victorian
veterinary surgeons in the mid-nineteenth century. It was only 80 years ago
that abnormal parathyroid gland function was associated with the pathogenesis
of the hypocalcaemia characteristic of the disease, and the current basis for
its treatment with intravenous calcium salts was established. Although this
treatment is effective, most recent research has focused on preventing the
disease through an understanding of the endocrine control of extracellular
calcium homeostasis. In the 1970s the synthetic vitamin D analogue
1
-hydroxycholecalciferol was developed for intramuscular injection
before a cow calved, but variable results encouraged other preventive
strategies to be considered, including restricting the dietary intake of
calcium, and manipulating the dietary cation-anion balance of cows before they
calved. Currently, the role of extracellular calcium receptors in the
parathyroid gland is under investigation as a preliminary step to devising
more effective treatments and/or preventive methods for milk fever.
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