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1.
Schweiz Arch Tierheilkd ; 159(5): 293-300, 2017 May.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28475484

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Two flocks of ewes with lambs were compared for differences in performance. One group was permanently infected with footrot, the other one served as healthy control. They were kept in the same barn but in different bays during lambing and on pasture during the summer. Biweekly all animals were weighed and in the affected group all feet were scored for severity of footrot and if necessary the claws were treated. Furthermore the body condition was scored 4 times in the ewes. The lambs were slaughtered with 43 kg. At that time age and carcass quality were used as parameters. In 20 lambs of each group the lying behaviour was measured using a datalogger during 5 consecutive days. The results revealed significant differences in the performance of ewes and lambs between the two groups. The overall duration of fattening was 31.8 days longer in affected animals. Most importantly, even mild footrot led to significantly impaired growth of the lambs and an altered lying behaviour compared to the healthy controls. The lying periods were more frequent but of shorter duration in affected lambs.


INTRODUCTION: Dans le but d'évaluer la baisse de la performance causée par le piétin chez les moutons, on a comparé deux groupes de brebis avec leurs agneaux, l'un affecté par le piétin et l'autre non. Ces animaux ont tous été détenus dans la même étable dans des enclos séparés et mis au pâturage en été durant toute la journée. Tous les animaux ont été pesés toutes les deux semaines et les onglons ont été évalués et si nécessaire traités dans le groupe présentant du piétin. Chez les brebis, on a estimé à quatre reprises le Body Condition Score. Les agneaux ont été abattus avec un poids moyen de 43 kg, l'âge d'abattage et l'estimation de la carcasse ont été relevés. Dans chaque groupe, 20 agneaux ont été équipés durant 5 jours d'un enregistreur afin de mesurer leur comportement en matière de couchage. Des différences significatives en termes de performances ont été relevées aussi bien chez les brebis que chez les agneaux. La durée d'engraissement était prolongée de 31.8 jours chez les agneaux affectés de piétin. L'information la plus importante est que des signes modérés de piétin conduisent déjà à une baisse significative de la prise de poids des agneaux, mais également à une modification du comportement avec des périodes de couchage plus fréquentes mais moins longues par rapport aux animaux sains.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal , Foot Rot/physiopathology , Sheep Diseases/physiopathology , Animals , Case-Control Studies , Sheep
2.
Prev Vet Med ; 96(1-2): 93-103, 2010 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20627343

ABSTRACT

From observational studies, farmers who use parenteral antibacterials to promptly treat all sheep with footrot (FR) or interdigital dermatitis (ID) have a prevalence of lameness of < 2% compared with a prevalence of 9% lameness reported by farmers who treat lame sheep by trimming affected feet. We tested the hypothesis that prompt treatment of sheep lame with naturally developing FR or ID with parenteral and topical antibacterials reduces the prevalence and incidence of lameness with these conditions compared with less frequent treatment with trimming of hoof horn and applying topical antibacterials.A further hypothesis was that reduction of ID and FR would improve productivity. A lowland sheep flock with 700 ewes was used to test these hypotheses in an 18-month within farm clinical trial with four groups of ewes: two intervention and two control. The duration and severity of lameness was used to categorise sheep into three weighted scores of lameness (WLS): never lame (WLS0), mildly lame/lame for < 6 days (WLS1) and severely or chronically lame (WLS2). The intervention reduced the prevalence of lameness due to FR and ID in ewes and lambs and the incidence of lameness in ewes. The WLS was also significantly lower in sheep in the intervention groups. Ewes with a higher WLS were subsequently significantly more likely to have a body condition score < 2.5 and to have lame lambs. Significantly more ewes lambed and successfully reared more lambs that were ready for slaughter at a younger age in the intervention versus control groups. There was an increase in the gross margin of Pound630/100 ewes mated in the intervention group, including the cost of treatment of Pound150/100 ewes mated. We conclude that prompt parenteral and topical antibacterial treatment of sheep lame with ID and FR reduced the prevalence and incidence of these infectious conditions and led to improved health, welfare and productivity.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Dermatitis/microbiology , Dermatitis/veterinary , Foot Rot/microbiology , Lameness, Animal/microbiology , Oxytetracycline/therapeutic use , Sheep Diseases/microbiology , Administration, Topical , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Anti-Bacterial Agents/administration & dosage , Birth Weight , Dermatitis/epidemiology , Dermatitis/physiopathology , Dermatitis/therapy , Dichelobacter nodosus/growth & development , Female , Foot Rot/epidemiology , Foot Rot/physiopathology , Foot Rot/therapy , Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections/epidemiology , Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections/microbiology , Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections/physiopathology , Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections/therapy , Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections/veterinary , Infusions, Parenteral/veterinary , Lameness, Animal/epidemiology , Lameness, Animal/physiopathology , Lameness, Animal/therapy , Oxytetracycline/administration & dosage , Pregnancy , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/epidemiology , Sheep Diseases/physiopathology , Sheep Diseases/therapy , Statistics, Nonparametric
3.
Vet Ther ; 4(1): 83-93, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12756639

ABSTRACT

Seven well-controlled studies conducted under multiple management conditions demonstrated that ceftiofur, a late-generation veterinary parenteral cephalosporin, is effective for the treatment of bovine foot rot in beef and dairy cattle. Two preliminary dosage titration studies using a challenge model compared the efficacy of ceftiofur (1.1 mg or 2.2 mg ceftiofur equivalents [CE]/kg administered once daily for 3 days) with placebo. One preliminary clinical study evaluated the efficacy of ceftiofur sodium (1.0 mg CE/kg once daily for 3 days) in lactating dairy cows. Two clinical trials evaluated the efficacy of ceftiofur sodium versus placebo for naturally occurring foot rot, and two trials compared the efficacy of ceftiofur sodium or hydrochloride (1.0 mg CE/kg) with oxytetracycline (6.6 or 10 mg/kg), each administered once daily for 3 days, for treatment of acute foot rot in beef cattle. All trials demonstrated the efficacy of ceftiofur for treatment of acute bovine foot rot. Ceftiofur and oxytetracycline were comparable in efficacy, with ceftiofur having excellent injection-site tolerance and short or no milk discard or preslaughter withdrawal.


Subject(s)
Cattle Diseases/drug therapy , Cephalosporins/therapeutic use , Clinical Trials as Topic , Foot Rot/drug therapy , Animals , Cattle , Cattle Diseases/economics , Cattle Diseases/pathology , Cattle Diseases/physiopathology , Cephalosporins/administration & dosage , Cephalosporins/adverse effects , Foot Rot/complications , Foot Rot/pathology , Foot Rot/physiopathology , Lameness, Animal/complications , Lameness, Animal/pathology , Lameness, Animal/physiopathology , Treatment Outcome
4.
Res Vet Sci ; 60(2): 126-33, 1996 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8685533

ABSTRACT

An anamnestic serological test for ovine footrot was evaluated. Footrot-free lambs were infected with Dichelobacter nodosus and treated four, six or eight weeks later. There were strong linear correlations between the severity of the lesions and both the primary response and the anamnestic response evoked by the subcutaneous injection of an antigen from D nodosus 16 weeks after the treatment of the lambs; the latter correlation was stronger than the correlations reported elsewhere in mature sheep. Similar anamnestic responses were elicited six and 12 months after the treatment of mature sheep which had had severe lesions. Natural anamnestic responses were demonstrable in sheep which had had recurrent clinical episodes of virulent footrot. The non-specific humoral responses after the anamnestic challenge of footrot-free sheep increased with age and did not depend on the dose of the antigen between 10 and 200 micrograms. Using the pooled data from sheep of all ages and a positive-negative cut-off which was selected to obtain a sensitivity of 75 per cent, the specificity of the anamnestic test was 90 per cent, similar to that reported for the primary response when it was used to diagnose footrot. The anamnestic test can be applied to determine the presence and severity of footrot in young sheep.


Subject(s)
Bacteroides/immunology , Foot Rot/immunology , Immunologic Memory , Sheep Diseases , Aging/immunology , Animals , Antibodies, Bacterial/blood , Antibody Formation , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Female , Foot Rot/microbiology , Foot Rot/physiopathology , Sensitivity and Specificity , Sheep , Time Factors
5.
Res Vet Sci ; 59(2): 102-5, 1995 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8525095

ABSTRACT

A total of 141 Dichelobacter nodosus isolates from 46 merino sheep farms with various clinical forms of footrot was examined by the gelatin gel test and the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using virulent (Vf2 and Vr2) and benign (Bf and Br) specific primers. Isolates from sheep with virulent and high intermediate footrot usually produced relatively thermostable proteases, but a decreasing proportion of the isolates from sheep with medium and low intermediate or benign footrot had thermostable proteases, as determined by the gelatin gel test. The amplification by PCR of a major band of 857 bp by Vf2 and Vr2 was often associated with isolates from the more virulent forms of footrot whereas the presence of a major band of 1300 bp by Vf2 and Vr2 and/or a band of 609 bp by Bf and Br was associated with isolates from less virulent forms of footrot. Nevertheless, the virulent and benign gene regions represented by Vf2 and Vr2 and Bf and Br are only two of the many factors involved in determining the virulence of D nodosus. As a result the relationship observed between the clinical manifestations of footrot and specific DNA products amplified by PCR was not complete.


Subject(s)
Bacteria, Anaerobic/isolation & purification , Bacterial Infections/veterinary , Foot Rot/diagnosis , Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , Sheep Diseases , Animals , Bacteria, Anaerobic/genetics , Bacteria, Anaerobic/pathogenicity , Bacterial Infections/diagnosis , Bacterial Infections/epidemiology , Base Sequence , DNA Primers , Extremities , Foot Rot/epidemiology , Foot Rot/physiopathology , Incidence , Molecular Sequence Data , Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/epidemiology , Victoria/epidemiology , Virulence
6.
Vet Rec ; 137(4): 85-7, 1995 Jul 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8533247

ABSTRACT

Threshold responses to a mechanical pressure test were measured in two groups of adult female sheep taken from 27 flocks in north Devon. The first group consisted of 470 healthy sheep and the second of 139 sheep suffering from obvious lameness, clinically diagnosed as foot rot. The lame sheep were assessed for the severity of the lesion and the level of lameness and assigned a score. In flocks with sheep with a severe degree of lameness, the sheep had a significantly lower threshold to a mechanical nociceptive stimulus than their matched sound controls and their thresholds remained low when tested three months later, after the apparent resolution of the foot rot lesion. In flocks where the lame sheep were less severely affected there was no difference in the threshold responses to a mechanical stimulus between the sound and lame sheep.


Subject(s)
Lameness, Animal/physiopathology , Nociceptors/physiopathology , Pain/veterinary , Sensory Thresholds/physiology , Sheep Diseases/physiopathology , Analgesia/veterinary , Animals , Female , Foot Rot/complications , Foot Rot/physiopathology , Forelimb , Lameness, Animal/etiology , Pain/physiopathology , Pain Measurement/veterinary , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/etiology
7.
Res Vet Sci ; 58(1): 61-6, 1995 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7709063

ABSTRACT

The antinociceptive effect of flunixin meglumine was assessed in healthy and lame sheep by using a noxious mechanical stimulus. Sheep suffering from the chronically painful condition, footrot, have previously been shown to have lower thresholds to noxious mechanical stimuli than healthy animals. In the present study, 22 sheep suffering from footrot did not have a lower mean mechanical threshold than 25 matched healthy animals, but it was significantly greater than that recorded from eight experimental sheep (5.0 [2.5], 4.9 [2.1] and 3.0 [1.0] Newtons, respectively). Doses of 1.0 or 2.0 mg kg-1 of flunixin meglumine had no effect on the thresholds to noxious mechanical stimulation in either experimental sheep tested over six hours, or in lame sheep tested over a period of 30 minutes. The repeated administration of flunixin to sheep suffering from footrot over a period of three days reduced their thresholds to noxious mechanical stimulation.


Subject(s)
Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/pharmacology , Clonixin/analogs & derivatives , Foot Rot/physiopathology , Pain Threshold/drug effects , Sheep Diseases/physiopathology , Sheep/physiology , Animals , Clonixin/pharmacology , Female , Lameness, Animal/physiopathology , Male , Physical Stimulation , Statistics as Topic
8.
Aust Vet J ; 68(2): 45-9, 1991 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2025200

ABSTRACT

Body weight and traits associated with production of wool were measured over a 2-year period between 1985 and 1987 in south-western New South Wales in a flock of Merino wethers experimentally infected with footrot. The disease was allowed to spread freely amongst 150 of the flock but kept at very low prevalence in the remaining 50 by preventive footbathing during transmission periods. Severe, underrunning footrot had a significant adverse effect on body weight, for each year of the trial. Body weight was most severely reduced at times of the year when footrot was spreading among animals and lesions were severe. The mean body weight of the infected group at the end of the 2 years of observation was 7.3 kg (11.6%) below that of the control group. Footrot also depressed wool growth, with the mean clean fleece weight of the infected group being 0.4 kg (8%) lighter than that of the controls at each of the 2 annual shearings. There were no consistent differences between the groups for the other wool characteristics measured.


Subject(s)
Body Weight , Foot Rot/physiopathology , Sheep Diseases/physiopathology , Wool/growth & development , Animals , Foot Rot/epidemiology , Male , Prevalence , Regression Analysis , Seasons , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/epidemiology
9.
Pain ; 42(3): 323-329, 1990 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2174527

ABSTRACT

There is evidence that post-injury hypersensitivity is partly due to changes in the central nervous system. Sheep with foot rot were used to investigate the effect of chronic pain on some receptors thought to be involved in spinal nociceptive processing systems (alpha 2 adrenoceptor and mu and delta opioid receptors). Saturation binding studies showed a variable distribution of [3H] clonidine (alpha 2 adrenoceptor agonist) in the spinal cord of normal sheep. The number of receptors (Bmax) present in areas thought to be involved in nociceptive processing, laminae I and II and lamina X, increased to 131% and 169% of control sheep values respectively in animals exposed to chronic pain. The affinity of the receptors (KD), however, remained unchanged at approximately 2 nM. There was less [3H]DAGO (mu opioid agonist) and [3H]DPDPE (delta opioid agonist) binding in the sheep spinal cord. Both opioid receptor types being mainly located in the superficial dorsal horn. The [3H]DPDPE binding was unchanged in the sheep with foot rot, whilst the number (Bmax), but not the affinity, of the [3H]DAGO binding sites increased in laminae I and II in lame animals to 130% of the control sheep values. Hence, in animals in chronic pain, the number of alpha 2 adrenoceptors and mu opioid receptors increased mainly in areas of the sheep spinal cord associated with nociception.


Subject(s)
Pain/metabolism , Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha/metabolism , Receptors, Opioid/metabolism , Spinal Cord/metabolism , Animals , Binding Sites , Chronic Disease , Female , Foot Rot/physiopathology , Receptors, Opioid, delta , Receptors, Opioid, mu , Sheep
10.
Aust Vet J ; 61(11): 348-52, 1984 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6529394

ABSTRACT

The effects of 3 ovine and one bovine strains of Bacteroides nodosus on the severity of foot-rot, bodyweight and wool growth were compared in Merino sheep in a field experiment. Based on the severity of the induced foot lesions, one strain was classed as virulent (causing underrunning lesions in most feet), one was benign (causing lesions of the interdigital skin only), and 2, including the bovine strain, were of intermediate virulence (causing underrunning lesions in a small proportion of feet). Differences among strains in their effect on foot-rot severity and bodyweight were significant when compared over the whole experimental period, but were not significant at any single time of measurement, because of large differences between replicates. Bodyweight loss and severity of foot-rot caused by the virulent strain were significantly greater than that caused by the benign strain. The intermediate strains lay between these 2 extremes in terms of both bodyweight and foot-rot scores but were not significantly different from either in a statistical sense. Total greasy wool weight did not differ among groups over the whole experiment, but the rate of wool growth during the period when foot lesions were most prevalent and severe was reduced appreciably by the virulent strain and to a lesser extent by the intermediate strains.


Subject(s)
Bacteroides/pathogenicity , Body Weight , Foot Rot/pathology , Sheep Diseases/pathology , Wool/growth & development , Animals , Australia , Foot Rot/microbiology , Foot Rot/physiopathology , Male , Sheep , Sheep Diseases/microbiology , Sheep Diseases/physiopathology , Species Specificity , Virulence
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