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. 2018 Feb 28;96(3):1159–1170. doi: 10.1093/jas/skx063

Table 5.

Effects of nonimplanted or implanted beef steers fed varying concentrations* of supplemental trace minerals on plasma glucose and urea nitrogen concentrations

Plasma No IMP IMP† SEM P value
CON, n = 6 REC, n = 6 IND, n = 6 CON, n = 6 REC, n = 6 IND, n = 5 GS TM GS × TM
Glucose,‡ mg/dL
 Day 0 105 99 98 101 94 114
 Day 70∥ 96 97 95 98 102 103 4.4 0.14 0.88 0.79
 Day 124∥ 94x,y 108x 93y 104x,y 98x,y 107x,y 5.1 0.29 0.72 0.06
PUN,‡ mg/dL
 Day 0 9.0 8.0 9.4 10.6 10.3 8.2
 Day 70∥ 9.0 9.9 10.2 7.6 9.0 8.4 0.74 0.03 0.22 0.85
 Day 124∥ 10.0 11.4 10.1 9.7 10.8 10.3 0.85 0.74 0.33 0.90

x,yWithin rows, means without a common superscript tend to differ (P ≤ 0.10).

*Supplemental trace mineral treatments: CON (no additional supplemental trace minerals), REC (2016 NASEM recommendations: 10 Cu, 30 Zn, 20 Mn, 0.10 Se, 0.15 Co, and 0.50 I; mg/kg), and IND (feedlot consultant recommendations from Samuelson et al. (2016) of 20 Cu, 100 Zn, 50 Mn, 0.30 Se, 0.20 Co, and 0.50 I; mg/kg). Sources of trace mineral included copper sulfate, zinc sulfate, manganese sulfate, calcium iodate, sodium selenite, and cobalt carbonate.

Growth-stimulated implanted steers (IMP) received Component TE-IS (16 mg estradiol + 80 mg TBA) on day 0 and were reimplanted with Component TE-200 (20 mg estradiol + 200 mg TBA) on day 56, whereas NoIMP received no implants.

Blood samples were collected before feeding.

Day 0 concentrations used as a covariate in analysis.

SEM, standard error of the mean.