Validation of the Measurement of Beta-Hydroxybutyrate and Non-Esterified Fatty Acids in Bovine Saliva: A Pilot Report
Camila P. Rubio, Lucas Rigueira, Marta Miranda, Pedro Javier Vallejo, Jesús Semitiel, David del Olmo, María D. Contreras-Aguilar, Flávio G. Silva, Elsa Lamy, Christian De la Fe, José J. Cerón, Fernando Tecles

TL;DR
This study shows that measuring beta-hydroxybutyrate and fatty acids in cow saliva can help detect health issues like hyperketonemia and respiratory disease.
Contribution
The study validates saliva as a sample for measuring BHB and NEFAs in cattle and suggests their potential as non-invasive biomarkers.
Findings
Salivary BHB concentrations were higher in cows with hyperketonemia compared to healthy cows.
Salivary NEFA concentrations increased in newborn calves after birth and were higher in calves with respiratory disease.
BHB and NEFAs can be reliably measured in bovine saliva using colorimetric methods.
Abstract
Serum beta-hydroxybutyrate (BHB) and non-esterified fatty acids (NEFAs) are biomarkers of situations of negative energetic balance in bovine. However, knowledge about their possible measurement and use in saliva is limited. In this report, two commercially available methods for the measurement of BHB and NEFAs were validated for use in bovine saliva. Both methods showed good precision and accuracy. The BHB concentrations were correlated between the saliva and the serum, but not the NEFA concentrations. The cows with hyperketonemia (n = 17) had increased salivary BHB compared to the cows with no clinical signs and no hyperketonemia (n = 34) and those with clinical signs of metritis (n = 17). The salivary NEFA concentration increased in newborn calves (n = 10) on days 1 and 2 of life compared to the day of birth before colostrum intake. The calves with symptomatic bovine respiratory…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal health and immunology · Veterinary Equine Medical Research · Reproductive Physiology in Livestock
