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Defining blood and milk biomarkers for healthy status
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Veterinary Science & Technology

ISSN: 2157-7579

Open Access

Defining blood and milk biomarkers for healthy status


Global Veterinary Summit

August 31- September 02, 2015 Orlando-FL, USA

Francesco Napolitano

Animal Production Research Centre, Italy

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Veterinar Sci Technolo

Abstract :

The progress in research on the immune-physiology, is witnessing a growing interest in the system of regulation of the immune response. One of the most critical moments, in terms of changes that occur in the immune system of dairy cattle, is the peripartum. For this physiological stage, it is generally spoken of a state of immunosuppression, which is important to assess the extent and duration. In addition, it is necessary to clarify in precise terms which parameters could define the condition of immunosuppression. In fact, for some parameters such as the leucocyte and neutrophils count in peripheral blood, it seems to be an increase in this phase; however, what seems altered in negative measure is the real ability of these cells to carry out their functions of defense. Diseases at calving and during early lactation account for the major health and welfare problems in dairy production. These include production diseases such as fatty liver, ketosis, rumen acidosis and lameness and infectious diseases such as mastitis and reproductive tract infections. Infertility and disease are strongly inter-linked through communal metabolic and immune signaling pathways. A number of biomarkers are well described in blood but are currently less well characterized in milk. Potential milk biomarkers are free glucose, iso-citrate, beta-hydroxy-butyrate (ketosis and fatty liver), lactate dehydrogenase (mastitis), progesterone (infertility and metritis). An increase in intrinsic resistance to disease will result in reduced antibiotic intervention. This will not only lead to an increased food-product quality, but may also help to slow down the development of multi-drug resistant bacteria.

Biography :

Francesco Napolitano has completed his PhD in Animal Production Sciences in July 1990, Faculty of Agriculture at University of Naples, Italy. He worked as a Senior Researcher at the Animal Production Research Centre (Council for Agricultural Research and Economics, CRA). He was the responsible person for scientific project “Improvement of the Italian livestock through advanced tools of genomics, transcriptomics and proteomics-GENZOOT” (2006-2015). He has published more than 20 papers in the last five years.

Email: francesco.napolitano@entecra.it

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Citations: 4472

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