1 / 43

Calf Scours

Calf Scours. Causes, Prevention, & Treatment Brendan Kraus, DVM Thanks Dr. Larson. Calf Scours Complex. Multifactorial Disease. Host. Environment. Agent. Host Factors. Level of Immunity Passive Transfer Calves are born without antibodies

tucker-webb
Télécharger la présentation

Calf Scours

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Calf Scours Causes, Prevention, & Treatment Brendan Kraus, DVM Thanks Dr. Larson

  2. Calf Scours Complex • Multifactorial Disease Host Environment Agent

  3. Host Factors Level of Immunity • Passive Transfer • Calves are born without antibodies • Calves should ingest at least 1 gallon of colostrum in the first 12 hours of life (recommendations have changed) • Many calves ingest inadequate levels

  4. Host: Level of ImmunityPassive Transfer

  5. Host: Level of ImmunityPrevention Tips • Ensure Adequate Passive Transfer • Prevent Dystocia • Bull Selection Based on EPD for birth weight and calving ease

  6. Select for Calving Ease

  7. Host: Level of ImmunityPrevention Tips 4) Proper Development of Dam • Dam should calve at BCS 5.5-6.0 • Avoid over-condition or rapid weight gain in late gestation (fat in pelvic canal)

  8. BCS 6

  9. Environment Factors • Overcrowding • Poor Sanitation • Damp or wet ground • Age of Dam • Poor Quality Milk/milk replacers

  10. Environment: Overcrowding/SanitationPrevention Tips • Optimize Environment/Sanitation • Calving areas should be as clean and dry as possible • Calves should be dispersed as much as possible (intensive vs. extensive)

  11. Intensive vs. Extensive Concentration Intensive Permits Ready Intervention Extensive Favors Hygiene

  12. Environment: Overcrowding/SanitationPrevention Tips 1) Optimize Environment/Sanitation(cont.) • Separate calving pasture from winter feeding pastures (more uncommon for spring calvers) • Feeding strategy considerations

  13. Feeding Strategy Considerations • Bale feeders • Spread bales • Feed bunk movement • Water sources • Stockpiled forage

  14. Environment: Overcrowding/SanitationPrevention Tips • Optimize Environment/Sanitation (cont.) • Calving areas should have adequate drainage • Provide protection from the wind

  15. Environment: Overcrowding/SanitationPrevention Tips • Control Exposure • Which calves are at risk?

  16. Calves are not Equally at Risk! 1 to 3 week-old calves are also shedding the most scours pathogens • Most calves are 1 to 2 weeks of age at time of death • Calves older than 3 weeks are at low risk of death From David Smith et al, 2004

  17. Calves are not Equally at Risk! • Calves born early in the calving season are at low risk • Calves born late in the calving season are at high risk From David Smith et al, 2004

  18. Calves are not Equally at Risk! • The risk of scours and the severity of disease in each affected calf increases as the calving season progresses • The age at disease onset decreases as the calving season progresses From David Smith et al, 2004

  19. Environment: Overcrowding/SanitationPrevention Tips 2) Control Exposure (cont.) • Pasture Rotation • Keep young calves away from older calves

  20. Control Exposure: Keep Young Calves away from Older Calves

  21. Pasture Rotation 1) Mid-late gestation pasture(minimum) • Can be sorted at preg check OR 2) Move heavies every 1-3 weeks • New calves being born on clean pasture • Older calves staying behind in contamination • Herd reassembled for breeding • Youngest calf around 3 weeks old

  22. Environment: Overcrowding/SanitationPrevention Tips 2) Control Exposure (cont.) • Calve Heifers Early • Be Wary of Outside Calves

  23. Agent • Escherichia coli (1-6 days) • Clostridium perfringens (1-14 days) • Rota Virus (5-21 days) • Corona Virus (5-36 days) • Cryptosporidium (6-21 days) • Salmonella (6-36 days)

  24. E. Coli • 2 types:Septicemia & Enterotoxogenic • Usually within 3-5 days of life • Severe, watery diarrhea (secretory, ETEC) • Depression • Hypothermia • Distant Infections (joints, brain navel, septicemia)

  25. Enterotoxogenic E-coli

  26. Clostridium perfringens • < 2 weeks old • Low morbidity : High mortality • Healthy, fast growing calves • Heavy milking dams • Sudden Death • Diarrhea/Abdominal Pain • Necrosis of small intestine • Enlargement of intestinal lymph nodes

  27. Rotavirus • Most Common • Often found in mixed infections • 5 days to 3 weeks of age • Affects small intestine • Voluminous (Malabsorptive) • Lactose washout with osmotic diarrhea • Dehydration • At least 7 days to repair intestinal damage

  28. Coronavirus • More Severe than Rota • 5 days to 30 days of age • Large and small intestine • Dehydration • Anorexia • Infects intestinal cells more severely • Malabsorption/maldigestion • Respiratory Infections

  29. Cryptosporidium • Zoonotic Potential • 7 days to 30 days of age • Protracted, non-responsive diarrhea • Intracellular but extracytoplasmic • Drugs difficult to kill • Off Label

  30. Salmonella • > 10 days of age • Foul smelling diarrhea • Fibrin and mucosa may be present in stool • Distant infections

  31. Treatment Challenges • Hypothermia • Hypoglycemia • Acidosis • Low Protein • Electrolyte Imbalances • Hypovolemia/Dehydration

  32. Treatment • Cornerstone of Treatment is Fluid Therapy Calculate Dehydration % and Replacement Amount

  33. Fluid Therapy

  34. Fluid Therapy • Correct Dehydration • Correct Electrolyte Imbalances • Combat Shock • Support Internal Organ Function • Supplement Energy

  35. Fluid Therapy Routes of Administration • Oral • Intravenous

  36. Oral Fluids • Must have GI motility (body temp) • Must have GI perfusion (dehydration) • Must have absorptive function (damage) • Benefits-Inexpensive

  37. Intravenous Fluids • Rapid Replacement of fluid deficits • Replacement of Electrolytes (bicarbonate) • Base Deficit Correction • Replacement of Ongoing Losses

  38. Treatment, Other • Nutritional Support • Body Temperature Maintenance • Maintain Oral Fluids/Electrolytes • Antibiotics +/-

  39. Scours Outbreak • Short Term Intervention Strategies • Treat affected calves • Calving site selection and management • Change location of calves • Calving season • Move pregnant cows away from nursing cows • Dystocia management • Monitor calving closely • Good husbandry and nutrition of dam

  40. Scours Outbreak • Long Term Prevention Strategies • Care and Nutrition of Dam • Dystocia • Sire selection and heifer development • Calving site selection and management • Plan ahead, get site ready • Pasture Rotation • Be as aggressive as you need for your operation • Vaccination (last for a reason)

  41. Scours Vaccination • Dam vaccinated/antibodies in colostrum • To be used as a tool in the arsenal • Usage determined by risk • Vaccination of younger stock • Must have two rounds prior to calving the first year • Vaccinations available for the calf • Will not work as sole prevention measure

  42. A Too Common Scenario? • It’s March 3, a cold drizzle is coming down as you slide across the pasture in 4WD. Vet and client are surveying a pasture of 40 cow/calf pairs. Calves range in age from 1 day to 2 months. The mud is ankle deep. Approximately 50% of the calves have fluid stools. Four calves have died in the last 2 days, and at present, 4 calves are weak and unable to stand. The client turns and asks, “What do you think we should we do?”

  43. Questions?

More Related