Publication | Open Access
Serum Urea Nitrogen and Conception Rate: The Usefulness of Test Information
182
Citations
10
References
1993
Year
Serum Urea NitrogenNutritionFertilityReproductive HealthDiagnosisGynecologyLivestock ProductionLivestock HealthSemen AnalysisPrecision DairyRenal FunctionBody CompositionLikelihood RatioBiostatisticsTest InformationClinical ChemistryPublic HealthAnimal ProductionLaboratory MedicineConception RateAnimal PhysiologyInfertilityAndrologyAnimal NutritionBayes TheoremClinical NutritionMaternal HealthPrenatal TestingUrologyAnimal ScienceVeterinary ScienceLikelihood Ratio TestMedicineAnimal Breeding
Total of 627 AI in 332 Holstein cows in nine herds were used to examine the relationship between serum urea N and conception rate. Cows were assigned randomly to one of three isocaloric diets varying in protein degradability and content. The AI occurred from 50 to 150 DIM. Mean serum urea N for each cow from 50 to 150 DIM was used to examine conception rate and serum urea N. The clinical interpretation of serum urea N on conception rate is evaluated using Bayes theorem from two approaches (dichotomization vs. continuous). Test information resulting from dichotomization of serum urea N into high and low categories (maximizing the average of test sensitivity and specificity) is compared with likelihood ratio approaches allowing a continuous measure. Likelihood ratio test indicates that conception rate decreases with serum urea N of > 14.9 mg/dl, but dichotomized test suggests that the decrease does not occur until serum urea N is > 20 mg/dl.
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