Title of article
Thyroid hormones in small ruminants: effects of endogenous, environmental and nutritional factors
Author/Authors
Todini، L نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
12
From page
997
To page
1008
Abstract
Appropriate thyroid gland function and thyroid hormone activity are considered crucial to sustain the productive performance in
domestic animals (growth, milk or hair fibre production). Changes of blood thyroid hormone concentrations are an indirect
measure of the changes in thyroid gland activity and circulating thyroid hormones can be considered as indicators of the
metabolic and nutritional status of the animals. Thyroid hormones play a pivotal role in the mechanisms permitting the animals
to live and breed in the surrounding environment. Variations in hormone bioactivity allow the animals to adapt their metabolic
balance to different environmental conditions, changes in nutrient requirements and availability, and to homeorhetic changes
during different physiological stages. This is particularly important in the free-ranging and grazing animals, such as traditionally
reared small ruminants, whose main physiological functions (feed intake, reproduction, hair growth) are markedly seasonal.
Many investigations dealt with the involvement of thyroid hormones in the expression of endogenous seasonal rhythms, such
as reproduction and hair growth cycles in fibre-producing (wool, mohair, cashmere) sheep and goats. Important knowledge
about the pattern of thyroid hormone metabolism and their role in ontogenetic development has been obtained from studies in
the ovine foetus and in the newborn. Many endogenous (breed, age, gender, physiological state) and environmental factors
(climate, season, with a primary role of nutrition) are able to affect thyroid activity and hormone concentrations in blood, acting
at the level of hypothalamus, pituitary and/or thyroid gland, as well as on peripheral monodeiodination. Knowledge on such
topics mirror physiological changes and possibly allows the monitoring and manipulation of thyroid physiology, in order to
improve animal health, welfare and production
Keywords
Goats , Nutrition , Sheep , Seasons , Thyroid hormones
Journal title
Animal
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Animal
Record number
653410
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