1. Urine pH as predictor of blood acid-base status in dairy cattle fed acidogenic diets.
- Author
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Melendez P, Redrovan D, and Chelikani PK
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Female, Urine chemistry, Acidosis veterinary, Cattle Diseases blood, Cattle Diseases urine, Acid-Base Equilibrium, Animal Feed analysis, Diet veterinary
- Abstract
We determined the association between urine pH and blood acid-base indicators and assessed a urine pH cut-off value to predict severe metabolic acidosis under field conditions in cows fed acidogenic diets. Eighty-six cows were sampled for urine and blood. Urine pH was evaluated immediately after collection, and blood acid-base status was evaluated within 2 hours of collection using a portable blood analyzer. Twenty-five cows were classified as having severe metabolic acidosis (blood pH ≤ 7.4; bicarbonate < 24 mmol/L, base excess ≤ -0.5; PCO
2 low to normal concentrations and urine pH between 4.88 and 5.71. There was a positive linear association between urine pH and blood pH (r = 0.46), and between urine pH and base excess (r = 0.74). The area under the ROC curve was 0.91 (CI 95 %= 0.84-0.96; good-excellent test). The optimal cut-off value for urine pH to categorize a cow with severe metabolic acidosis was 5.5 (94 % specificity and 72 % sensitivity). For each 0.1 unit of decrease in urine pH below 5.5, cows were 1.6 times (95 % CI= 1.3-2.1) more likely to exhibit a severe metabolic acidosis. We conclude that a urine pH of 5.5 or less is indicative of more life-threatening metabolic acidosis in dairy cows., Competing Interests: Conflicts of interest The authors of this manuscript declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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