Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10979329 | Journal of Dairy Science | 2011 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
The incidence of clinical mastitis and infection status at calving was assessed in quarters treated with 1 of 2 internal teat sealants at the time of dry off. Two contralateral quarters per cow (n = 63 cows) were treated with a sealant that contained 0.5% chlorhexidine; the other quarters were treated with a commercial teat sealant. Ten cows were untreated (controls). On d 2, 4, and 16 after dry off, cows were challenged with Streptococcus uberis S210 strain. Cows were examined daily for 34 d after drying off and cases of clinical mastitis were recorded. Milk samples were collected for culture from any quarters that developed clinical mastitis during the first 34 d after drying-off and from all quarters on d â5 and 0 relative to treatment and at the first and twentieth milking after calving. The incidence of clinical mastitis during the examination period was lower in treated quarters (n = 7/252; 1.5%; lower incidence for those treated with chlorhexidine-containing teat sealant n = 3/126; 1.2%) than in untreated quarters (n = 13/40; 26.8%). The protection against intramammary infection after calving, adjusted for the effect of cow, was higher in quarters treated with the novel teat sealant (89/105; 15.2%; 95% CI = 9.6-23.4) than in those treated with the commercial teat sealant (71/104; 31.7%; 95% CI = 23.5-41.3) and untreated controls (6/28; 78.6%; 95% CI = 59.8-90.0), respectively. Quarters treated with teat sealants were less likely to have an intramammary infection after calving and had a lower incidence of clinical mastitis during the early dry period than did untreated controls in this challenge study.
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Authors
K.R. Petrovski, A. Caicedo-Caldas, N.B. Williamson, N. Lopez-Villalobos, A. Grinberg, T.J. Parkinson, I.G. Tucker,