Title: Mastitis in Dairy Cattle
1Mastitis in Dairy Cattle
- AVS 346
- Dairy Cattle Technology
2Mastitis
- An inflammation of the milk secreting tissues of
the udder, caused by microbial infections in one
or more quarters. - Disease of Humans
- Affects 25 to 30 percent of all quarters
- The most costly disease of dairy cattle
- 200 /cow/year
- 2 Billion annually
3Mastitis Affects on Profitability
- Decreased milk production
- 70 of total costs
- Not visible to producers
- Milk dumped due to treatment
- Veterinary and drug costs
- Labor costs
- Culling and death losses
- Lost quality premiums
4Determinants of Mastitis
Resistance, nutrition, stress
Host
Infectious Agent
Environment
Pathogenicity, virulence, number
Housing, equipment, hygiene, weather, bedding
5Mastitis Infection
- Almost always caused by bacteria that generally
enter through the teat canal. - Four ways for cow to get mastitis!!
- The environment inside the udder is warm and
moist with plenty of available nutrients, so
bacteria multiply rapidly.
6Mastitis Terminology
- Clinical Presence of clinical signs
- Signs of infection
- Udder shows signs of inflammation (Rewdness,
swollen, tender, hard, etc.) - Milk is abnormal
- Flecks, gargot (clots), off color, bloody
- Goal lt2 per month
- Subclinical
- No evidence of abnormality except milk positive
on special tests. - CMT, SCC, Sterile milk culture, etc.
7Mastitis in a Herd
Clinical
Subclinical
8Detecting Subclinical Mastitis
- Increased Somatic Cells
- Bulk Tank SCC
- DHI Individual Cow SCC
- Direct Count, spectroscopy
- CMT
- Sterile Milk Culture
- Find mastitis causing organisms
- Electrical Conductivity
- Antibody ELISA
- NAGase
- N-Acetyl-B-D-Glucosaminidase
9Mastitis Terminology
- Acute
- Rapid and severe onset
- High temperature
- Serious condition
- Chronic
- Persistent subclinical form
10Mastitis Affects on Milk Composition
- Milk Production Decreases milk production by
causing tissue damage, reduced lactose production
and scar tissue formation in the udder. - Milk Quality and Composition
- Increasing somatic cell count
- Polymorphonuclear neutrophils
- Decreasing lactose, casein, and fat production,
- Increasing blood components such as Na, K, Cl,
bicarbonate, IgG and serum albumin. - Electrical potential disrupted
- Bacteria, blood cells and enzymes
- Proteolysis
- Lipolysis and globule breakdown
- Off flavors
11Effect of SC on Milk Composition
Source John C. Bruhn, Extension Food
Technologist, U.C.-Davis, 1983.
12Effect of SCC on Cheese Yield
13Types of Mastitis
14Contagious Mastitis
- Primary habitat bacteria live on/in the udder and
teat lesions - Poor survival of bacteria in the environment
- Is spread from cow to cow, primarily during
milking by milk-contaminated fomites at milking,
sponge, milker's hands, milking machine - Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus agalactia,
Mycoplasma bovis and sometimes streptococcus
uberis are contagious mastitis causing organisms. - Usually chronic, subclinical mastitis
15Test Dont Guess!!!
Know the bug your dealing with!!
16Streptococcus agalactiae
- Strep Ag
- Gram positive
- Inhabits ducts and cisterns
- Does not survive in environment
- Inflammation blocks duct
- Leads to decreased milk production, increased
somatic cell count and involution - Few enzymes/toxins produced
- Antibiotic sensitivity
17Strep Ag - Continued
- Common Old Form
- Still common in poorly managed herds
- Causes 20-40 subclinicals for each clinical
- Susceptible to penicillin
- Can eradicate from herd with Test Treat
program - Well managed herds have eradicated it
- Dry cow treatment highly effective
- Proper sanitation and milking procedures prevent
cross infection
18Sources of Strep Ag
- Major source is the infected cow.
- Injected into udder during milking
- Squawking
- Contaminated floors and stalls
- Newly purchased cows
- Heifer calves suckling penmates.
- Milking personnel as carriers
19Staphylococcus aureus
- 1 cause of mastitis in US
- Many forms
- Acute, chronic, subclinical (chronic, subclinical
predominates) - Produces many enzymes/toxins (catalase,
coagulase) - Invasive-hyaluronidase
- Resists phagocytosis immune system
- Forms abscesses may result in fibrosis
- Facultative intracellular pathogen
- Decreased milk production and increased somatic
cell count
20Staphylococcus aureus
- Antibiotic resistance resulting from genetic
mutations - Difficult to eliminate
- Some environmental survival
- Skin, bedding
- Transferred via milking machine and milker
- Hands - Gloves
- May be isolated from mammary gland of heifers
- Found in combination with other bugs
- Early detection critical to successful treatment
21Mycoplasma
- Between a bacteria and a virus
- Characterized by sandy granules and tan colored
milk - No cell wall so antibiotics are ineffective
- Control by biosecurity
- Spread through contaminated antibiotics, syringes
milking units, common cloths, etc. - Teat dipping is a good preventative
- Isolation and culling
- Usually in well-managed herds
- NYS Study 10 of herds have infected cow
- Maine BT Study 2002 3 of herds
22Control of Contagious Mastitis
- Dip teats in germicide after pre and post milking
- Treat quarters with dry cow antibiotics at end of
lactation - Milking order or separate claw for infected cows
- Flush milk claws (hot water or germicide) after
milking infected cows (backflushing) - Individual cloth/paper towels to wash/dry teats
- Clean hands, latex gloves
- Culture new cow additions
- Cull persistently infected cows
- Minimize teat end lesions
- Dry treat heifers before calving
23Environment Mastitis
- Environment to cow
- Incidence increases as the incidence of
contagious mastitis decreases - Primary habitat of bacterial is in the
environment (feces, soil, bedding, water) - Environmental contact at milking time or between
milkings
24Environmental Mastitis
- Organisms from the bedding, stalls, corrals, etc.
gain entrance through fatigued teat canals after
or during milking to cause infection. - Streptococcus dysgalactia, Streptococcus uberus,
and Coliform (E. coli, Klebsiella) are a few the
organisms that live in the environment.
25Got Mastitis??
26Coliforms
- E. coli, Klebsiella spp., Enterobacter spp.,
Citrobacter spp. - Gram negative
- Feces, bedding, wet dirty udders
- Transient peracute/acute mastitis
- Endotoxin
- Very sick - death
- More prevalent in warm, wet weather
27Sources
- Infection occurs when contaminated material
contacts and enters teat canal - Infections occur at any stage
- Sediment from unclean surroundings, flank, and
udder - Manure
- Polluted water (barnyard)
- Unclean equipment
- Wet bedding, especially green sawdust
- Infected quarter of other cows
28Eschericha coli
- Clinical signs include
- Acute to subclinical infections
- Yellow to watery secretion
- Subnormal temperature
- Quarter can be hard and swollen
- Inhabitant of GI tract
- Wet milking
- Septic infusion into udder
- Antibiotics of little help
- Supportive therapy
- Fluids, steroids, antihistamines,
antiprostaglandins
29Klebsiella
- Clinical signs similar to E. coli
- Acute to subclinical infections
- Yellow to watery secretion
- Subnormal temperature
- Quarter can be hard and swollen
- Associated with soil contamination
- Grows well in wood products
- Switch bedding
- Maintain high pH in bedding
30Streptococcus species
- Strep non-ag, Environmental streps
- ie. Strep uberis, dysgalactiae, bovis
- Inhabitants of GI tract
- Infection rates highest before calving
- Behave like traditional mastitis organisms with
chronic infections and high SCCs - Clinical signs
- Similar milk infections with clots and flakes
- Moderate swelling
- High SCC
- Only mastitis organisms that elevate bulk tank
plate count - Prevention
- Milking sanitation, milk clean dry teats,
predipping, clean up environment of dry cows,
switch to sand bedding.
31Other Staph Organisms
- CNS Coagulase Negative Staphylococcus
- Sometimes called Environmental Staphs
- Not all species live in the environment
- Many live on the skin and in the teat canal
- 20 of milk samples will be positive with no
signs of mastitis - May actually prevent other forms of mastitis
- Common in well managed herds
- 3-10 of clinical cases
- Clinical and subclinical infections
- More common in first lactation cows and in early
lactation - Heifers havent had dry treatment
- Up to 73 spontaneous cure rate
- Treatment not recommended
- Dry cow therapy, teat dipping and milking
procedures important in prevention
32Other Environmental Organisms
- Pseudomonas
- Gram negative, ubiquitous
- Contaminated water, pipes, heater, wash hoses,
teat dip - Antibiotic resistance
- Protheca
- Algae
- Wet soil and mud
- Yeasts
- Excessive antibiotic therapy
- Contaminated infusions
33Control of Environmental Mastitis
- More difficult to control than the contagious
pathogens - Most are resistant to germicides in teat dip and
antibiotics in dry cow therapy - Key is to ID source and remove (bedding, ponds,
mud) - Clip or flame udders
- Milk only clean dry teats
- Clean parlor, stalls, bedding
- Barrier dips
- Predip teats with germicide before milking No
water - Keep cows standing after milking - feeding
- Sterile single-dose infusion products
- Sterile infusion techniques (alcohol swab)
34Teat Sealant
35Orbeseal
36Orbeseal data
37Timing of Infection
38Somatic Cell Counts - SCC
- Epithelial cells and white blood cells
- Changes with milk production, infection, age,
stage. - Measures the level of udder stress/damage/irritati
on - Individual Cows
- Under 240,000 /ml uninfected
- Over 240,000 /ml considered infected
- Not a measure of actual mastitis infection
- Do not treat based solely on SCC!
- Bulk Tank
- Legal limit 750,000/ml not very stringent
- Easy way to assess the mastitis level in a herd
- Excellent mastitis management tool
- Highest correlation with milk production of any
DHIA measure - SCC probably can't be too low
- Not the SCC but response to infection which is
important
39Factors that Influence SCC
- Minor Factors
- Age of the cow
- Stage of lactation
- Season
- Stress on the gland
- Breed
- Genetics
- Milking fraction
- Major Factor
- Mastitis infection
40CMT
41Somatic Cell Score - SCS
- Log of the SCC
- Used on DHIA sheets
- Fewer digits
- SCC of 1,000,000 versus SCS of 6.4
- Starts at 12,500 equals SCS of 0
- Doubles from 0 to 1, 1 to 2, 2 to3 etc.
- SCS of 4 or greater Infected
- Corresponds better to lost milk production
42Milk Production Losses
Eberhardt, et. al. 1979
43Early Lactation Mastitis Increases DO
Schrick et al. 1999. NMC Proceedings. P.189-190
44Mastitis Treatment
- IMM Therapy
- Injection of antibiotics into udder
- Systemic Therapy
- Antibiotics IV or IM
- Supportive Therapy
- Remove toxins Frequent milkout
- Treat dehydration, swelling and pain
- Know bug
- Lactational Therapy
- Likelihood of success?
- Dry Cow Therapy
- Larger dose, longer acting product
45Mastitis Treatment
- IMM Therapy
- Probably treat more cows than we need to
- Use an approved product
- Use proper technique
- Have culture reports and sensitivities
- Make best guess on first drug
- Cow history, treatments and results
- Dont give up on a certain antibiotic, often
response is seen with longer course of therapy - Have a standard protocol
46Mastitis Treatment Protocols
47Supportive Treatment
- Treat the symptoms
- Pain, temperature, swelling, dehydration etc.
- Reduced risk of antibiotic residues
- Organic herds
- Oxytocin / Stripping
- Eliminates toxins and bacteria food
- Not effective against contagious bugs
- Aspirin, Antihistamines, Anti-inflammatory
- Fluids dehydration
48Mastitis Prevention
- Environmental
- Keep cows clean!
- Proper Bedding
- Clean and dry
- General farm housekeeping
- Manure, water, flies
- Udder flaming, tail docking
- Cow comfort Stalls
- Post dipping
- Barrier dips
- Contagious
- Proper Milking Techniques
- Procedures, training, monitoring
- Predipping
- Maintain milking equipment
- Milk contagious cows last
49Diagnosing a Herd Problem
- Bulk Tank SCC dairy plant
- ID Herd problem
- Individual SCCs
- ID Cows
- CMTs
- ID Cows
- Check reasons for culling
- Infected cows may be gone!
- Sterile Milk Culture
- ID bug
- Determine treatment and prevention procedures
50Flow of DHIA Data
DART, Raleigh, NC
USDA-AIPL Associations AI Studs
LOOP - Ithaca, NY
Supervisor Upload
Components Lab
Mail or Download
Data Milk Samples
Farm
51DHIA Individual Cow SCC
- Level of new infections
- Low (lt4) last month - high (gt4) this month
- Benchmark lt2 cows
- Level of chronic infections
- High last month - high this month
- Benchmark lt10 of cows
- First lactation animals affected
- When are infections happening?
- At calving? Later lactation
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53Culling
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58Graph of Previous SCS vs Current SCS
59Average SCS by Lactation
60Number of Cows in Herd with Score of 7-9
61Avg SCS Lactation1, DIM lt40
62SCS Throughout Lactation