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Mineral Nutrition for Ruminants
35

Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Mineral Nutrition for Ruminants

Page 2: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant
Page 3: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Major Minerals

Major (macro) mineralsCa, P, K, Mg, Na, Cl, S Included as % in diet

FunctionsStructuralNerveElectrolytesOsmotic balanceBuffer in the rumen

Page 4: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Trace Minerals

Trace (micro) mineralsCobalt, copper, iodine, iron, manganese,

molybdenum, selenium and zinc all requiredChromium-no established requirement Included as ppm or ppb in diet

FunctionEnzyme co-factor or component

Page 5: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Mineral Deficiencies

Page 6: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Milk Fever

Metabolic disease at/after parturition in dairy cows

Rapid decrease in serum Ca because Ca is lost to colostrum secretion

Symptoms included lack of appetite and paralysis

Treatment is intravenous Ca borogluconate

Page 7: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Milk Fever Prevention Include anionic salts in diet for 3-5 wks prior to

parturitionmEq(Na+ + K+) – mEq(Cl- + SO4

-)

Normal diet: +20 to +30 mEq/100g diet (electrolyte balance)

Anionic diet: -7 to -25 mEq/100g diet Induces mild acidosis, which increases tissue

responsiveness to PTHCa release from bone to serum

Page 8: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Grass Tetany

Hypomagnesemia in ruminants Usually following lush spring growth Fertilizing with K or N make it worse Symptoms include muscular twitching,

collapse, convulsionTreatment is Intravenous injection (IV) Mg

gluconatePrevent with high Mag mineral (MagOx)

Page 9: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant
Page 10: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Copper, sulfur and molybdenum

High sulfur & molybdenum thiomolybdates Cu + thiomolybdates insoluble complexes Thiomolybdates can result in reduced Cu absorption and

systemic metabolism

NRC, 1996

Page 11: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

0 114 183 241 297 422 459 490

Pla

sma

Cu

, mg

/L

Calf day of age

Cu Adequate Cu Def icient Cu Def icient + Mn

Page 12: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Mineral Toxicosis

Page 13: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Maximum Tolerable Levels for Ruminants

Page 14: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Copper Toxicosis

Sheep particularly sensitive to copper5 ppm CuExcessive Cu builds up in Red Blood Cells,

causing Heinz-body formation and methemoglobin production

Can’t bind oxygen-chocolate bloodRelease of hemoglobin damages kidneys

Avoid feeding cattle mineral

Page 15: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Copper Toxicosis Treatment

IV methylene blue to control metHb Copper chelators

D-penicillamine Ammonium tetrathiomolybdate

Cu:Mo ratio of 10:1 or less

Page 16: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Sulfur Toxicity in Ruminants

Dietary sulfate reduced to H2S (gas) Eructate-reinhale Toxic in high amounts

Polioencephalomalacia (PEM, brainers)

Page 17: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Brain lesions due to S toxicity

Page 18: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Polioencephalomalacia (PEM) Terminology

Polio = gray matter Encephalo = brain Malacia = tissue death

Clinical signs Subacute – head pressing, circling, ataxia, staggering,

blindness, depression, stupor Acute – blindness, seizures, comatose

Can be caused by thiamine deficiency, lead or salt poisoning and high sulfur diets

Page 19: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

S induced PEM

Does not appear to be caused by thiamine or copper deficiency No alterations of thiamine or its mono- and diphosphate esters in

whole blood, brain, cerebrospinal fluid, or liver (Sager et al., 1990; Gould et al.,1991)

Thiamine treatment can help reduce symptoms Increase energy availability to the brain

plays a key role in the tri-carboxcylic acid cycle and pentose shunt Thiamine-supplemented groups also manifested PEM, even

though clinical signs were not observed (Olkowski et al., 1992).

Page 20: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Pka of HS- = 7.04

60% of ruminal gas that is eructated is inhaled

Page 21: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

S Induced PEM

Page 22: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Oxidative Stress

Reactive oxygen compoundByproduct of cellular respirationRoles in cell signallingDangerous in excess

Oxygen CompoundHydroxylSuperoxideHydrogen peroxide

Page 23: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Oxidative Stress

EffectsDNA damageLipid peroxidation (oxidation of

polyunsaturated fatty acids) Inactivation of some enzymes (oxidation of

metal cofactors)

Page 24: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Antioxidant Capacity

Superoxide dismutaseSuperoxide anion to hydrogen peroxideCopper-Zinc SOD-cytosolManganese SOD-mitochondria

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superoxide_dismutase

Page 25: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Antioxidant Capacity

CatalaseHydrogen peroxide to water and oxygenConsists of 4 parts, each containing a heme

(iron) group

Page 26: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Antioxidant Capacity

Glutathione peroxidaseHydrogen peroxide to waterSelenium dependent enzyme-4 selenium

atoms per molecule

Page 27: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Iodine

Function- part of thyroid hormone (metabolism rate)70-80% of body I- is in thyroidT4 (thyroxine)T3 (triiodothyronine)-3 times more active than

T4Controls rate of energy metabolism in cells

Page 28: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Iodine

Deficiency “goiter” enlarged thyroid gland

Plants have “goitrogens” (goiter creating), block use of iodine

Reduced growth Impaired reproduction-dead, weak or

hairless young

Page 29: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Goiter in lamb

Page 30: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Selenium

Regulated by the FDA, because relatively low levels toxic (i.e. 10x requirement)

Function Glutathione peroxidase (antioxidant) Iodothyronine 5’-deiodinase-1 (T4 conversion to T3)

Page 31: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Selenium

Deficiency Deficient in many areas of U.S. Muscular dystrophy

Sheep-white muscle disease Reproductive problems such as retained placenta and

low fertility, weak newborns

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Page 34: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant

Cobalt

Essential component of B12 Required by ruminants Rumen microorganisms synthesize B12

from cobalt B12 dependent enzymes

Methylmalonyl-CoA mutaseMethionine synthetase

Page 35: Mineral Nutrition Ruminant