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Metabolic disorders in Ruminant, Fat Cow Syndrome ,Fatty liver syndrome

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"last update: 19 May  2026"                                                                                        Download Guideline

- Etiology and Risk Factors

1- Overconditioning

Overfeeding during late lactation or the dry period leads to high Body Condition Scores (BCS > 4.0), storing excess fat. The primary risk factor is excessive adiposity at calving. Fat cows have:

  • Reduced feed intake near parturition
  • Greater susceptibility to NEB
  • Increased fat mobilization compared to normal-weight cows

2- Negative Energy Balance (NEB)

Around calving, energy demand increases dramatically as milk production begins. When intake does not match demand, adipose tissue mobilizes non-esterified fatty acids (NEFAs), predisposing to fatty liver.

3- Hepatic lipidosis

Hepatic Lipidosis (Fatty Liver): The liver takes up these NEFAs but cannot process them all. They are esterified into triglycerides and stored, severely impairing liver function

4- Metabolic Crisis: The damaged liver fails in gluconeogenesis, causing fatal hypoglycemia and increasing ketone body production (ketosis).

3- Metabolic and Hormonal Changes

  • Increased insulin resistance in late gestation
  • Increased lipolytic activity
  • Hepatic inability to export triglycerides as very low-density lipoproteins (VLDLs)

4- Concurrent Diseases

FCS frequently coexists with:

  • Ketosis
  • Milk fever
  • Metritis
  • Mastitis
  • Displaced abomasum

These conditions reduce appetite, worsening energy deficit and fat mobilization.