Vitamins and Minerals
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Transcript Vitamins and Minerals
Mineral Nutrition for
Ruminants
Major Minerals
Major (macro) minerals
Ca,
P, K, Mg, Na, Cl, S
Included as % in diet
Functions
Structural
Nerve
Electrolytes
Osmotic
balance
Trace Minerals
Trace (micro) minerals
Cobalt,
copper, iodine, iron, manganese,
molybdenum, selenium and zinc all required
Chromium-no established requirement
Included as ppm or ppb in diet
Function
Enzyme
co-factor or component
Mineral Deficiencies
Milk Fever
Metabolic disease at/after parturition in
dairy cows
Rapid in serum Ca because Ca is lost to
colostrum secretion
Symptoms included lack of appetite and
paralysis
Treatment is intravenous Ca
borogluconate
Milk Fever Prevention
Include anionic salts in diet for 3-5 wks
prior to parturition
+ K+) – mEq(Cl- + SO4-)
Normal diet: +20 to +30 mEq/100g diet
(electrolyte balance)
Anionic diet: -7 to -25 mEq/100g diet
mEq(Na+
Induces mild acidosis, which increases
tissue responsiveness to PTH
Ca
release from bone to serum
Grass Tetany
Hypomagnesemia in ruminants
Usually following lush spring growth
Fertilizing with K or N make it worse
Symptoms include muscular twitching,
collapse, convulsion
Treatment
is IV Mg gluconate
Prevent with high Mag mineral (MagOx)
Copper, sulfur and molybdenum
High sulfur & molybdenum
thiomolybdates
Cu + thiomolybdates
insoluble complexes
Thiomolybdates can result in reduced Cu absorption and
systemic metabolism
NRC, 1996
Cu Adequate
Cu Def icient
Cu Def icient + Mn
1.8
1.6
Plasma Cu, mg/L
1.4
1.2
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
0
114
183
241
297
Calf day of age
422
459
490
Mineral Toxicosis
Maximum Tolerable Levels for
Ruminants
Copper Toxicosis
Sheep particularly sensitive to copper
5
ppm Cu
Excessive Cu builds up in RBC, causing
Heinz-body formation and methemoglobin
production
Can’t bind oxygen-chocolate blood
Release of hemoglobin damages kidneys
Avoid feeding cattle mineral
Copper Toxicosis Treatment
IV methylene blue to control metHb
Copper chelators
D-penicillamine
Ammonium
tetrathiomolybdate
Cu:Mo ratio of 10:1 or less
Sulfur Toxicity in Ruminants
Dietary sulfate reduced to H2S (gas)
Eructate-reinhale
Toxic in high amounts
Polioencephalomalacia
(PEM, brainers)
Brain lesions due to S toxicity
Polioencephalomalacia (PEM)
Terminology
Clinical signs
Polio = gray matter
Encephalo = brain
Malacia = tissue death
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
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).
60% of ruminal gas that is eructated is inhaled
Pka of HS- = 7.04
S Induced PEM
Oxidative Stress
Reactive oxygen species
Byproduct
of cellular respiration
Roles in cell signalling
Dangerous in excess
Species
Hydroxyl
Superoxide
Hydrogen
peroxide
Oxidative Stress
Effects
DNA
damage
Lipid peroxidation (oxidation of
polyunsaturated fatty acids)
Inactivation of some enzymes (oxidation of
metal cofactors)
Antioxidant Capacity
Superoxide dismutase
Superoxide
anion to hydrogen peroxide
Copper-Zinc SOD-cytosol
Manganese SOD-mitochondria
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superoxide_dismutase
Antioxidant Capacity
Catalase
Hydrogen
peroxide to water and oxygen
Consists of 4 parts, each containing a heme
(iron) group
Antioxidant Capacity
Glutathione peroxidase
Hydrogen
peroxide to water
Selenium dependent enzyme-4 selenium
atoms per molecule
Iodine
Function- part of thyroid hormone
(metabolism rate)
of body I- is in thyroid
T4 (thyroxine)
T3 (triiodothyronine)-3 times more active than
T4
Controls rate of energy metabolism in cells
70-80%
Iodine
Deficiency
“goiter” enlarged thyroid gland
Plants
have “goitrogens” (goiter creating),
block use of iodine
Reduced growth
Impaired reproduction-dead, weak or
hairless young
Goiter in lamb
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)
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
Cobalt
Essential component of B12
Required by ruminants
Rumen microorganisms synthesize B12
from cobalt
B12 dependent enzymes
Methylmalonyl-CoA
mutase
Methionine synthetase