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Clinical and gross pathologic findings of complicated vertical fissures with digital dermatitis in a dairy herd

Careful antemortem examination and interpretation of findings, assisted by good clinical records, do much to throw light on the nature of vertical fissure in cattle. During an eight month period of investigation, 13 (3.2%) lame cows with vertical fissure out of 52 Holstein cows with different claw f...

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Autores principales: Nouri, Mohsen, Ashrafi Helan, Javad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Urmia University Press 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4313051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25653774
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author Nouri, Mohsen
Ashrafi Helan, Javad
author_facet Nouri, Mohsen
Ashrafi Helan, Javad
author_sort Nouri, Mohsen
collection PubMed
description Careful antemortem examination and interpretation of findings, assisted by good clinical records, do much to throw light on the nature of vertical fissure in cattle. During an eight month period of investigation, 13 (3.2%) lame cows with vertical fissure out of 52 Holstein cows with different claw fissures were selected for clinical and gross pathological purposes in a commercial dairy farm with 400 milking cows in Nazarabad, Iran. The cows were 2.5 to10.5 years old. The prevalence rate of vertical fissure was 3.2 per cent. The prevalence rate of claw lesion in the hind limb (69.2%) was higher than that of fore limb (30.7%). The type of vertical fissures were 4 (38.4%), 5 (23.0%), 2 (23.0%) and 3 (15.3%), respectively. Locomotion scoring assessment of 13 culled lame cows showed score ranged from grade 3 (30.7%) to 4 (61.5%). The herd had endemic digital dermatitis infection with prevalence in the adult herd of over 34.2%. The affected claws were more boxy than normal and the abaxial wall was convex in all directions. The lame cows had typical stance such as hobbyhorse or cross legged stance. This study shows that more research is needed both on the economic impact of vertical fissures in dairy cows and on the microbiological study of spirochaetes of the genus Treponema. This study recommends that owners of dairy farm should try to control digital dermatitis with preventative herd strategies.
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spelling pubmed-43130512015-02-04 Clinical and gross pathologic findings of complicated vertical fissures with digital dermatitis in a dairy herd Nouri, Mohsen Ashrafi Helan, Javad Vet Res Forum Short Communication Careful antemortem examination and interpretation of findings, assisted by good clinical records, do much to throw light on the nature of vertical fissure in cattle. During an eight month period of investigation, 13 (3.2%) lame cows with vertical fissure out of 52 Holstein cows with different claw fissures were selected for clinical and gross pathological purposes in a commercial dairy farm with 400 milking cows in Nazarabad, Iran. The cows were 2.5 to10.5 years old. The prevalence rate of vertical fissure was 3.2 per cent. The prevalence rate of claw lesion in the hind limb (69.2%) was higher than that of fore limb (30.7%). The type of vertical fissures were 4 (38.4%), 5 (23.0%), 2 (23.0%) and 3 (15.3%), respectively. Locomotion scoring assessment of 13 culled lame cows showed score ranged from grade 3 (30.7%) to 4 (61.5%). The herd had endemic digital dermatitis infection with prevalence in the adult herd of over 34.2%. The affected claws were more boxy than normal and the abaxial wall was convex in all directions. The lame cows had typical stance such as hobbyhorse or cross legged stance. This study shows that more research is needed both on the economic impact of vertical fissures in dairy cows and on the microbiological study of spirochaetes of the genus Treponema. This study recommends that owners of dairy farm should try to control digital dermatitis with preventative herd strategies. Urmia University Press 2012 /pmc/articles/PMC4313051/ /pubmed/25653774 Text en This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Short Communication
Nouri, Mohsen
Ashrafi Helan, Javad
Clinical and gross pathologic findings of complicated vertical fissures with digital dermatitis in a dairy herd
title Clinical and gross pathologic findings of complicated vertical fissures with digital dermatitis in a dairy herd
title_full Clinical and gross pathologic findings of complicated vertical fissures with digital dermatitis in a dairy herd
title_fullStr Clinical and gross pathologic findings of complicated vertical fissures with digital dermatitis in a dairy herd
title_full_unstemmed Clinical and gross pathologic findings of complicated vertical fissures with digital dermatitis in a dairy herd
title_short Clinical and gross pathologic findings of complicated vertical fissures with digital dermatitis in a dairy herd
title_sort clinical and gross pathologic findings of complicated vertical fissures with digital dermatitis in a dairy herd
topic Short Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4313051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25653774
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