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Clinical Trial
. 1996 May 15;208(10):1702-4.

Use of corticosteroids alone or combined with glucose to treat ketosis in dairy cows

Affiliations
  • PMID: 8641955
Free article
Clinical Trial

Use of corticosteroids alone or combined with glucose to treat ketosis in dairy cows

N Y Shpigel et al. J Am Vet Med Assoc. .
Free article

Abstract

Objective: To compare relative efficacy of dexamethasone and flumethasone alone or in combination with rapid IV infusion of glucose for treatment of ketosis in cattle.

Design: Clinical trial.

Animals: 127 cows with urine acetoacetate concentration > or = 60 mg/dl.

Procedure: Cows were treated with 500 ml of 50% glucose solution. IV, and 40 mg of dexamethasone, IM (group 1), 40 mg of dexamethasone, IM (group 2), 5 mg of flumethasone (group 3), or 500 ml of 50% glucose solution, IV, and 5 mg of flumethasone (group 4). Treatment success was defined as recovery after a single treatment without relapse during the same lactation. Uterine disease (retained placenta or metritis), parity, and pretreatment plasma glucose, serum beta-hydroxybutyric acid, and urine acetoacetate concentrations were evaluated as possible confounding factors affecting recovery.

Results: Only uterine disease was found to have a significant effect on recovery. Treatments 1 and 4 were significantly more efficacious than was treatment 2, but efficacy of treatment 2 was not significantly different from that of treatment 3. Regardless of treatment, cows with uterine disease were less likely to have a successful outcome than were cows without uterine disease. In all treatment groups, plasma glucose concentration increased and serum beta-hydroxybutyric acid and urine acetoacetate concentrations decreased following treatment.

Clinical implications: In this study, treatment of ketosis in dairy cattle with a corticosteriod alone was less efficacious than treatment with glucose and a corticosteroid.

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