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Effect of abraded intramammary device on outcome in lactating cows after challenge exposure with Streptococcus uberis.
1988
Paape M.J. | Schultze W.D. | Cortlett N.J. | Weinland B.T.
Intramammary devices (IMD) were abraded with medium-grade emery cloth or were left smooth. One IMD of each type was inserted into a mammary quarter of each of 5 lactating cows. The remaining 2 quarters served as controls. Quarter foremilk, bucket milk, and stripping milk samples were collected for 3 consecutive days at 2 weeks after IMD insertion, and milk somatic cell counts (SCC) were determined. Milk samples also were collected immmediately after and 0.5, 1,2,4,6,8, and 11 hours after milking. All quarters were challenge exposed with 250 colony-forming units of Streptococcus uberis at 2 months after IMD insertion. Foremilk and stripping milk samples were collected for bacteriologic culture and SCC at the next 10 milkings. Mean foremilk, bucket milk, and stripping milk SCC (X 10(6) cells/ml) were 0.18, 0.07, and 0.91, respectively, for quarters with abraded IMD; 0.06, 0.05, and 0.43, respectively, for quarters with smooth IMD; and 0.03, 0.03, and 0.15, respectively, for control quarters. Mean SCC after milking ( X 10(6) cells/ml) for the various intervals were 0.70, 1.29, 0.70, 0.97, 1.15, 1.17, 0.77, and 0.85 for quarters with abraded IMD; 0.43, 0.62, 0.61, 0.45, 0.64, 0.60, 0.31, and 0.26 for quarters with smooth IMD; and 0.15, 0.24, 0.15, 0.19, 0.15, 0.15, 0.14, and 0.06 for control quarters. After challenge exposure, 2 of 5 of the quarters with abraded IMD, 4 of 5 of the quarters with smooth IMD, and 8 of 9 of control quarters became infected. Results indicated that abraded IMD increased SCC in stripping milk to concentrations that provided 60% protection against challenge exposure with S uberis.
Show more [+] Less [-]Evaluation of Haemonchus contortus infections in sexually intact and ovariectomized ewes
1988
Fleming, M.W. | Rhodes, R.C. III. | Gamble, H.R.
Three experiments were conducted to investigate experimentally the occurrence of periparturient nematode egg rise in ewes and the hormonal modulation of Haemonchus contortus infections. In the first experiment, fall-bred and winter-bred pregnant (n = 4 and 14, respectively) and nonpregnant (n = 5 and 29, respectively) ewes were treated with anthelmintic and were pastured together on fields that were contaminated with H contortus. Three weeks before lambing, all ewes were placed in concrete pens; fecal egg counts for the winter-bred group were obtained on alternate days. Pregnant and lactating ewes had significantly larger numbers (P < 0.01) of H contortus eggs than did the nonpregnant controls 1 week before and after lambing. Lactating, fall-bred ewes had significantly (P < 0.01) more adult worms in their abomasum through natural acquisition than the nonpregnant controls. In the second experiment, fall-bred and winter-bred helminth-free, pregnant (n = 4 and 8, respectively) and nonpregnant (n = 3 and 15, respectively) ewes were inoculated on 5 alternate days, beginning 70 days after breeding with 20,000 infective H contortus larvae. The ewes were maintained on concrete pens throughout pregnancy. Fecal egg counts were significantly (P < 0.05) greater in pregnant ewes, beginning 1 week before lambing until 1 week after lambing. Abomasums of lactating ewes from both lambing seasons yielded significantly (P < 0.01) more adult worms at necropsy than nonpregnant ewes. In the third experiment, ewes were ovariectomized (n = 15) or sham-operated (n = 9); half of the control ewes were bred. Beginning on day 70 of pregnancy, all ewes were inoculated orally with 20,000 infective H contortus larvae on 5 alternative days. Abomasums were removed from all ewes after lambing, and adult worms were recovered. Pregnant ewes and half of the ovariectomized ewes had significantly (P < 0.05) more worms than did the sham-operated ewes.
Show more [+] Less [-]Ecologic study of the risk factors for environmental mastitis in cows
1988
Schukken, Y.H. | Erb, H.N. | Sears, P.M. | Smith, R.D.
An index was developed to measure the proportion of intramammary infections caused by environmental microorganisms on dairy farms. This environmental index can be interpreted as the probability that an intramammary infection was caused by an environmental pathogen, rather than by a contagious pathogen. Using the environmental index as the outcome variable, risk factors for environmental mastitis were studied on 10 dairy farms in New York. Turning the cows outside was associated with lower environmental index, and having cows drink from a stream increased the environmental index. Selective (rather than uniform) nonlactating cow intramammary treatment was related to a lower environmental index (apparently because the farms practicing selective nonlactating cow treatment suffered from epizootics of contagious mastitis).
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of intracisternal bead devices on lacteal secretion components, plaque formation, and bacterial infection during the nonlactating period
1988
Nickerson, S.C. | Thompson, W.J. | Oliver, S.P. | Akers, R.M.
Effects of placing intracisternal bead devices (ICB) into teat cisterns of 6 dairy cows, from the end of lactation through parturition, were studied. Lacteal secretion samples were collected weekly from each mammary quarter during the nonlactating period to monitor composition changes in ICB-fitted and nonfitted quarters. In quarters remaining uninfected (n=15), there were significantly higher mean somatic cell counts (P less than 0.05), percentage of neutrophils (P less than 0.019), and cell viability (P less than 0.038), but significantly lower percentage of macrophages (P less than 0.013) in ICB-fitted quarters compared with those in nonfitted quarters. The ICB had no significant effect on mean weekly values for percentage of lymphocytes, pH, lactoferrin, citrate, citrate/lactoferrin molar ratio, serum albumin, alpha-lactalbumin, and N-acetyl-beta-D-glycosaminidase. In infected quarters (n=9), pH of mammary secretions was significantly (P less than 0.004) higher in ICB-fitted quarters, but concentrations of lactoferrin (P less than 0.004), alpha-lactalbumin (P less than 0.013), and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (P less than 0.028) were significantly lower, compared with those in nonfitted quarters. Coagulase-negative staphylococci comprised approximately 90% of all infections. Over the nonlactating period, 16.4 and 41.5% of samples from nonfitted and ICB-fitted quarters, respectively, contained coagulase-negative staphylococci. Microscopic examination of ICB from uninfected quarters revealed a thin coating of plaque with adhering neutrophils, macrophages, and multinucleated giant cells. Microscopic examination of plaque on devices from ICB-fitted quarters harboring coagulase-negative staphylococci revealed numerous adherent cocci and neutrophils.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effect of abraded intramammary device on outcome in lactating cows after challenge exposure with Streptococcus uberis
1988
Paape, M.J. | Schultze, W.D. | Cortlett, N.J. | Weinland, B.T.
Intramammary devices (IMD) were abraded with medium-grade emery cloth or were left smooth. One IMD of each type was inserted into a mammary quarter of each of 5 lactating cows. The remaining 2 quarters served as controls. Quarter foremilk, bucket milk, and stripping milk samples were collected for 3 consecutive days at 2 weeks after IMD insertion, and milk somatic cell counts (SCC) were determined. Milk samples also were collected immmediately after and 0.5, 1,2,4,6,8, and 11 hours after milking. All quarters were challenge exposed with 250 colony-forming units of Streptococcus uberis at 2 months after IMD insertion. Foremilk and stripping milk samples were collected for bacteriologic culture and SCC at the next 10 milkings. Mean foremilk, bucket milk, and stripping milk SCC (X 10(6) cells/ml) were 0.18, 0.07, and 0.91, respectively, for quarters with abraded IMD; 0.06, 0.05, and 0.43, respectively, for quarters with smooth IMD; and 0.03, 0.03, and 0.15, respectively, for control quarters. Mean SCC after milking (X 10(6) cells/ml) for the various intervals were 0.70, 1.29, 0.70, 0.97, 1.15, 1.17, 0.77, and 0.85 for quarters with abraded IMD; 0.43, 0.62, 0.61, 0.45, 0.64, 0.60, 0.31, and 0.26 for quarters with smooth IMD; and 0.15, 0.24, 0.15, 0.19, 0.15, 0.15, 0.14, and 0.06 for control quarters. After challenge exposure, 2 of 5 of the quarters with abraded IMD, 4 of 5 of the quarters with smooth IMD, and 8 of 9 of control quarters became infected. Results indicated that abraded IMD increased SCC in stripping milk to concentrations that provided 60% portection against challenge eexposure with S uberis.
Show more [+] Less [-]Morphologic changes in the bovine mammary gland during involution and lactogenesis
1988
Sordillo, L.M. | Nickerson, S.C.
Morphologic changes developing during bovine mammary involution were examined. Quarter biopsy specimens were obtained weekly from 5 cows beginning the day milking was discontinued through parturition. Light and electron microscopic examination of mammary tissue indicated a gradual reduction in synthetic and secretory activity of alveolar epithelium as involution progressed. Light microscopic morphologic analysis revealed increases in stroma and nonactive secretory epithelium, with concomitant decreases in epithelium, lumen, and fully active secretory epithelium during the first 2 weeks of involution. Electron microscopic analysis of alveolar epithelium revealed decreased number of organelles associated with milk synthesis and secretion during this time. These changes reversed gradually beginning 2 weeks before parturition, and by the time of calving, cell structure was typical of lactating glands. Tissue from infected quarters had less synthetic and secretory ability as indicated by significantly higher percentages of stroma and nonactive cells, but lower percentages of lumen and moderately active cells, compared with uninfected quarters. Infected quarters also had more leukocytes infiltrating the epithelium, lumen, and stroma, compared with uninfected quarters. Microscopic examination of macrophages and neutrophils suggested these cells removed milk components and cellular debris during involution. Large numbers of plasma cells, with distended cisternae of rough endoplasmic reticulum, suggested local antibody production during the periparturient period.
Show more [+] Less [-]Insulin and growth hormone responses to glucose infusion in mature and first-lactation dairy cows
1988
McClary, D.G. | Sartin, J.L. | Kemppainen, R.J. | Williams, J.C.
Five mature Holstein cows and 6 first-lactation Holstein cows were administered 100 mg of glucose/kg of body weight, IV, over a 20-minute period on postpartum day 30. A series (preinfusion, glucose infusion, and postinfusion) of blood samples was collected at -15, -10, -5, 5, 10, 15, 20, 30, 45, 60, 75, 90, 105, and 120 minutes from the start of the infusion. Serum was obtained and was assayed for glucose, immunoreactive insulin (IRI) growth hormone (GH), and free fatty acid concentrations. Baseline glucose and free fatty acid concentrations were similar in cattle of both groups throughout the sample collection period. Both groups of cattle disposed of the infused glucose in a similar manner. The first-lactation cows secreted significantly (P < 0.0001) more IRI to utilize the glucose load than did the mature cows, 71 +/- 13 microU/ml vs 38 +/- 7 microU/ml, respectively (mean +/- SEM). Preinfusion and glucose infusion GH concentrations were similar in cattle of both groups. In the postinfusion period, GH values were significantly (P < 0.0002) higher in the first-lactation cows (8.7 +/- 1.8 ng/ml) than in the mature cows (5.8 +/- 1.6 ng/ml). Compared with that in the mature cows, the higher IRI concentration required by the first-lactation cows to utilize approximately the same glucose load suggested that first-lactation cows were insulin resistant. The increased insulin response to increased glucose concentration may be one reason first-lactation cows produce less milk than do mature cows. Other factors, such as variation in the ability of the mammary gland to synthesize milk cannot be excluded.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of an orally administered live Escherichia coli pilus vaccine on duration of lacteal immunity to enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli in swine
1988
Moon, H.W. | Rogers, D.G. | Rose, R.
Primigravid swine were vaccinated orally with a live enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) strain that produces pilus antigen K99. The titers of K99 antibody in colostrum and milk of vaccinates remained higher than those of nonvaccinated controls through the first lactation after vaccination (4 weeks). Some control swine had low titers of K99 antibody in colostrum or developed low titers of K99 antibody in milk during lactation. Lacteal K99 antibody titers of vaccinates dropped to control levels during the second lactation, 6 months after vaccination. Pigs suckling vaccinates and controls were equally susceptible to challenge exposure to K99+ ETEC during the second lactation. Orally vaccinated swine given a parenteral booster vaccination (with killed K99+ ETEC) during their second gestation had K99 antibody in milk through their second lactation. During the second lactation, these orally vaccinated parenterally revaccinated swine had higher titers of K99 antibody in postcolostral milk than did nonvaccinated controls, controls given only the parenteral booster injection, or controls vaccinated parenterally during both gestations.
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