PCB concentrations in hair, blood, tissues and secretions of chronically-exposed dairy cows, fattening bulls and calves. 1. Course and relation of some polychlorinated biphenyls in hair, milk and tissues in exposed nursing cows and conventionally raised dairy cows] |
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Authors: | U Klein W Drochner E Forschner B Johannes |
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Affiliation: | Institut für Tierern?hrung, Tier?rztlichen Hochschule Hannover. |
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Abstract: | 20 cows contaminated chronically with PCB were kept as nurse cows or in a tie-stall. The contamination in different substrates (hair, milk, blood, feces) was examined for a period up to 8 months. The distribution of PCB in the carcass of some animals was registered in addition. The system of keeping nurse cows turned out to be useful in order to overcome a contamination situation. Drying off gravid animals in the first step helps solving problems of handling contaminated milk. With low contaminated animals a short dry off period is sufficient, so that the milk--after calving--is marketable (report II, in preparation). In case of nurse cows with two calves post partum a continuous decline of PCB-concentrations in the milk can be observed. With biological half life periods of 2-4 months, milk with PCB 153-concentrations of 0.15-0.20 mg/kg fat will be marketable within this period. Cows milked by milking-machines show a decline of PCB in the milk similar to nurse cows. Two animals had a limited increase p.p., probably caused by mobilization of fat in the high lactation stage. Over longer periods, the biological half-life-periods were comparable to nursing cows. Hair is easy to sample and store; it is useful as a diagnostic substrate beside the milk in order to estimate the degree of contamination in individual animals. The ratio of PCB-concentrations between perirenal fat and hair is 1:0.95 (s = +/-0.192); the ratio of PCB-concentrations between perirenal fat and milk is 1:0.77 (s = +/- 0.122).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) |
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