Interactions among factors affecting stillbirths in Egyptian buffaloes (Bubalus bubalis)
Ali Ali El-Raghi, Walaa M. Essawi, Mahmoud A. E. Hassan, Nesrein M. Hashem, Sameh A. Abdelnour

TL;DR
This study identifies risk factors and biological changes linked to stillbirths in Egyptian buffaloes, suggesting ways to reduce losses through management and nutrition.
Contribution
The study identifies gestation length, body condition score, calf sex, and calving season as significant risk factors for stillbirths in Egyptian buffaloes.
Findings
Stillbirth incidence was 6.64% in Egyptian buffaloes.
Male calves had 2.48 times higher odds of stillbirth compared to female calves.
Stillborn calves showed higher blood biochemical and cytokine alterations and lower immunoglobulins and glutathione peroxidase.
Abstract
In buffaloes, stillbirth (SB) is a major source of reproductive and economic losses. Hence, the objectives of this study were: 1) investigating the relationship between potential risk factors (body condition score [BCS], gestation period, calving season, calf sex, and dam parity) and SB occurrence in Egyptian buffaloes; and 2) identifying blood metabolites, the redox status, and immune-inflammatory attributes in calves that may be related to SB. The incidence of SB was 6.64%. Among the evaluated risk factors, BCS was a significant risk factor for SB. There was a 73.7% lower odds (lower odds odd ratio, OR = 0.246) of SB for dams with a gestation length ≥ 305 days, compared to those with a gestation length < 305 days. The risk of SB decreased steadily with increasing dam parity. The odds of SB were 2.48 times higher in male calves compared to female calves. In comparison to the spring…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReproductive Physiology in Livestock · Animal health and immunology · Effects of Environmental Stressors on Livestock
