Thyroid hormones in small ruminants: effects of endogenous, environmental and nutritional factors

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 a...

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Main Author: L. Todini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2007-01-01
Series:Animal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731107000262
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spelling doaj-ea3d45695856406a8899f2366b79b76e2021-06-05T06:04:18ZengElsevierAnimal1751-73112007-01-01179971008Thyroid hormones in small ruminants: effects of endogenous, environmental and nutritional factorsL. Todini0Dipartimento di Scienze Ambientali – Sezione di Produzioni Animali, Università di Camerino, Via della Circonvallazione 93/95, 62024 Matelica (MC), ItalyAppropriate 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.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731107000262goatsnutritionseasonssheepthyroid hormones
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author L. Todini
spellingShingle L. Todini
Thyroid hormones in small ruminants: effects of endogenous, environmental and nutritional factors
Animal
goats
nutrition
seasons
sheep
thyroid hormones
author_facet L. Todini
author_sort L. Todini
title Thyroid hormones in small ruminants: effects of endogenous, environmental and nutritional factors
title_short Thyroid hormones in small ruminants: effects of endogenous, environmental and nutritional factors
title_full Thyroid hormones in small ruminants: effects of endogenous, environmental and nutritional factors
title_fullStr Thyroid hormones in small ruminants: effects of endogenous, environmental and nutritional factors
title_full_unstemmed Thyroid hormones in small ruminants: effects of endogenous, environmental and nutritional factors
title_sort thyroid hormones in small ruminants: effects of endogenous, environmental and nutritional factors
publisher Elsevier
series Animal
issn 1751-7311
publishDate 2007-01-01
description 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.
topic goats
nutrition
seasons
sheep
thyroid hormones
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731107000262
work_keys_str_mv AT ltodini thyroidhormonesinsmallruminantseffectsofendogenousenvironmentalandnutritionalfactors
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