Disease of Cattle
Disease of Cattle
Disease of Cattle
What is a disease
Any condition that results in deviation from normal function.
HOST ENVIRONMENT
ETIOLOGY
Infectious Agents Non-infectious agents
• Bacteria • Chemical
• Viruses • Physical
• Parasites • Lack or excess of certain
• Fungi vitamins and minerals
• Toxins
Vital Signs of Beef Cattle
• Temp. 100.4-102.8 ͦF avg. 101.5 ͦF
• Pulse 60-70 BPM
• Respiration 10-30 breaths per minute
Anthrax
What to Do
• Carcasses should be burned or buried at least 6’ deep and
covered with quicklime
– Take care not to bury the animal near wells or streams.
Prevention
• Vaccination
• In problem areas vaccination should occur yearly
• Where it is not common, vaccinate on the recommendation
of a vet.
Treatment
• Daily I/M injection of procaine penicillin (25mg/kg) or
oxytetracycline (5mg/kg) immediately.
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE)
Symptoms
• Abortion during the last ½ of pregnancy
• Retaining of afterbirth (placenta)
• Sterility in cows and bulls
• Reduced milk flow
• Enlarged testicles
• Weak calves (if born from infected cows)
Brucellosis Spreads By…
• Bringing infected cattle into the herd
• Fence line contact with infected animals
• Aborted fetus’s that carry the Brucella organism being carried
to other farms by dogs and other carnivorous animals
• Calves being infected by their mothers
• Cattle coming in contact with feed or water where the
organism is present
• Sniffing or licking an aborted fetus or calf from a cow that has
the disease
Treatment
• Massive doses of antibiotics
• Treatment is only effective if diagnosed early
• Prevention is more effective and less costly.
Scours (diarrhea in cow)
• Disease complex (group of diseases)
• Most common in fall, winter and spring
• Affects young calves
– calves over 2 months of age are seldom affected
Symptoms
• Acute
– Shock
– Nose, ears and legs are cold
– Diarrhea
– Sudden death
• Chronic
– Symptoms for several days
– Weight loss
– Death after several days if not treated
Etiology
Bacteria: Escherichia coli, Salmonella spp., Clostridium
perfringens, and other bacteria.
Viruses: Coronavirus, Rotavirus, BVD virus, IBR virus.
Protozoa: Cryptosporidium, Coccidia.
Prevention
• Sanitation
– Clean barns and buckets for bucket calves
• Calf needs colostrums (first milk)
• Supplement the cows diet with Vitamin A before calving
• Vaccines (most common types of scours)
– Vaccinate mothers at least 30 days prior to calving
Treatment
• Antibiotics
• Sulfa drugs
Foot Rot
• Caused by a variety of bacteria, fungi and
other organisms found in feedlots
Symptoms
• First noticeable sign is lameness
• Other symptoms
– Loss of appetite
– Fever
– Depression
– Animals may not want to stand or move around
• Death may eventually result
Prevention
• Sanitation and paved lots work best
• Good drainage and mounds in the feedlot also help prevent
conditions that encourage the disease.
• Spreading lime and 5% blue vitriol around water tanks and
feed bunks
Treatment
• Penicillin
• Wide spectrum antibiotics
• Sulfa drugs
Lump Jaw
• Chronic
• Rarely causes death
• Results in economic losses because the affected body part is
condemned at slaughter
• Affects the jaw and surrounding bony part of the head
Symptoms
• Tumors or lumps on the jaw.
• Loose teeth
• Spongy jaw bone resulting in breathing problems.
• Weight loss due to difficulty eating
Treatments and Prevention
• Surgical treatment may allow the animal to remain
marketable but complete recovery is usually not possible.
• To prevent keep sharp objects out of the feedlot or pasture.
Pinkeye
• Carried by insects
• Affects the eye of the animal
• A viral form of pink eye is associated with IBR
• White faced cattle and those with pink skin pigment around
the eye are more likely to be infected
• Pinkeye occurs year round but is most common during
periods of maximum sunlight.
Mild Pinkeye
• Eyeball develops a pinkish color
• Cornea becomes slightly clouded
Acute Pinkeye
• Flowing of tears
• Cloudiness of cornea
• As the infection progresses the cloudy condition becomes
worse and ulcers may develop on the eye
• The eye may become so damaged that blindness results
• The condition may last 3-4 weeks and if not treated will spread
to the whole heard
Spread By
• Insects
• Direct Contact with infected animals
• Dust
• Tail switching
Prevention
• Control flies and insects
• Vacinate
Treatment
• Isolated in a dark place
• Apply antibiotics and sulfa drugs to the eye
• A cloth patch can be used on the affected eye
Shipping Fever
(PI3 Pasteurella, Bovine Respiratory Disease)
• A disease complex that affects the respiratory tract
• Most common in young cattle at times of stress
Stresses
• Moving from range to the feedlot
• Extremes of heat or cold
• Exhaust fumes
• Hunger
• Fright
• Rough handling
Symptoms
• Early on----fever • Diarrhea
• Depression • Weight loss
• Drooping ears • Difficult breathing
• Discharge from the nose • Coughing
• Watery eyes • Pneumonia
• Loss of appetite • Possibly death
• If the animal recovers it will
be slow to gain
Prevention
• Vaccination after 4 mo. of age
• Best time is 3-4 weeks before weaning/shipping
• Reducing stress and exposure
• Good feedlot management and careful handling of new cattle
Treatment
• Antibiotics
• Sulfa drugs
• Treatment must begin as soon as symptoms are noticed
• Treatment after an animal has developed pneumonia is of
little value.
Trichomoniasis
• A venereal disease caused by a protozoan, Trichomona fetus
• Infects the genital tract of the bull and is transmitted to the
cow during breeding
• Clean bulls can also be infected by breeding “dirty” cows
• Can also be transmitted through infected semen, even when
artificial insemination is used.
Symptoms
• Abortion in early gestation
• Low fertility
• Irregular heat periods
• Uterine infection
• Cows may have discharge from their genital tract
• Bulls may not show any symptoms but still be capable of
transmitting the disease during breeding
• Identified by microscopic examination of material from an
aborted fetus, the prepuital cavity of the bull or vaginal
discharge from the cow
Trich Prevention
• Semen testing
• Testing cows before breeding
• Using only clean bulls on clean cows
• Selling all open cows
Vibriosis
• Reproductive disease
• Both intestinal and venereal
• Leading cause of infertility and abortion in the cattle industry
• Intestinal form has little harmful effect
• Venereal form is more serious
• If the organism infects the uterus there will be some abortion
in the herd
• Number of cows infected is usually small
• Cows do not become sterile and bulls are not affected.
Symptoms