Cattle

Abomasal ulcers in cattle

Many possible causes of abomasal ulcers have been suggested and investigated but the aetiology of them is still not definitively known. It is commonly accepted that a disruption in the balance between...

Control of bovine tuberculosis and Johne's disease in cattle

Does OTF status mean that a herd is actually free of endemic M. bovis infection or is the skin test failing to identify infected animals, particularly in herds that have recently regained OTF status?...

CattleReview: November–December 2021

Bovine respiratory disease (BRD) continues to be a leading cause of economic loss, hampered animal welfare and antimicrobial use in cattle operations, worldwide. To improve disease control and...

Youngstock health: a focus on Mycoplasma bovis, nematode control and the use of NSAIDS in scour

The importance of Mycoplasma bovis in causing and contributing to respiratory disease in cattle has been highlighted over recent years, however, it still remains a significant challenge to UK farmers....

TB control in the UK and New Zealand

TB control is in the news because of Geronimo the alpaca. There are so many angles to this story. These include social ones, such as whether it is right to cull an animal without clinical disease...

Is the end in sight for bovine viral diarrhoea virus, or is it just a mirage?

The global pandemic of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that is the cause of the serious life-threatening disease known as COVID-19, has focused attention on the control of infectious diseases in people and in...

Ovarian abscessation and oophoritis in a first lactation dairy cow: a case report

A first lactation, 28-month-old Holstein dairy cow was presented at a routine fertility visit at 47 days in milk for ‘oestrus not observed’. The cow had been examined at a previous routine fertility...

Treating clinical mastitis in dairy herds: a role for on farm culture?

Making decisions ‘cow-side’ to select those clinical mastitis cases that are unlikely to benefit from treatment with antibiotic has become an area of considerable interest in the research literature...

Transfer of passive immunity in dairy calves

The definition of FTPI has often been stated to be a serum IgG concentration of less than 10 mg/ml. While calves with serum IgG concentration below this cutpoint are consistently found to be at...

CattleReview: September–October 2021

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) limits the ability to prevent and treat infection, making it one of the foremost threats to human and animal health. Animal agriculture's use of antibiotics in food...

Antimicrobial resistance: how changes have improved practices in the UK dairy industry

AMR rarely causes clinical problems on dairy farms, so although AMR is causing increased global concern, it can be hard for the farmer-veterinary surgeon team to relate to this practically when...

Energized calf milk: is it worth investing in early life nutrition?

Historically, formulations of CMR have differed significantly from WM in their levels of energy, protein and minerals. Energy source is one of the major differences, and arguably one of the most...