Bovine GIT 3 Flashcards
Drooling saliva.
Can be a physical thing e.g. unable to swallow.
Can be a physiological thing e.g. pain/lesions in the mouth.
Common presentation for FMD.
May possibilities.
Differentials for saliva loss in cattle.
Malignant catarrhal fever.
FMD.
Vesicular stomatitis.
Listeria meningoencephalitis (facial nerve paralysis).
Actinobacillosis (tongue lesions).
Calf Diphtheria (infection of mouth soft tissues).
Abscess/lesion in mouth.
NOT A COMPLETE LIST!
Differentials for saliva loss in cattle.
- physical and toxic causes.
Buttercups/Rhododendron.
Organophosphorus toxicity.
Botulism.
Oral FB.
Pharyngeal FB.
Oesophageal FB.
Teeth problems.
Jaw fracture.
- Causative agent of Actinobacillosis?
- Why is the incidence of Actinobacillosis less now?
- What may possibly initiate the lesion?
- Clinical presentation?
- Tx?
- Actinobacillus lignieresii.
- Silage diet.
- “Rough” forage.
- Pain and swelling at tongue base, the cheek, or anywhere in the mouth.
Involvement of local draining LNs. - 5-7d IM streptomycin.
Traditional IV sodium iodide now no longer available.
- What is choke?
- What kinds of things cause it?
- Common site?
- Clinical presentation?
- Tx?
- What may increase risk of choke?
- Oesophageal obstruction by a FB.
- Potato, fodder beet pieces, turnips, apples.
- Just behind mandible or by thoracic inlet.
- Profuse salivation and then bloat.
- Gag, examine, manipulate (sedate?), stomach tube.
Smooth muscle relaxant if necessary. - Teeth problems - can’t chew properly.
Facial nerve paralysis.
Brain abscessation causing inability to swallow.
- Causative agent of actinomycosis?
- Prevalence?
- Clinical presentation of actinomycosis?
- Tx?
- Actinomyces bovis.
- Not common - found in nature cattle.
- Hard painless swelling on jaw, may lead to dysphagia and weight loss.
- Tetracyclines.
Traditionally sodium iodide IV (no longer available).
Must treat early for favourable Px.
- What is pasture bloat?
- When does pasture bloat occur?
- Presentation.
- Pasture bloat epidemiology.
- Rumen distension due to normal gas of fermentation trapped in a foam (cannot be educated).
- Occurs soon after moving cattle to lush (legume) pasture.
- Animals may be found dead (sudden death).
- Rapid intro of lush pastures.
Increasing UK problems due to increased interest in legumes.
Particular problem in spring after rapid plant growth.
Breeds - jersey more than Holstein.
Young more than adults.
Animals in good condition seem to be at a particular risk.
- Pasture bloat clinical signs .
- Pasture bloat PM pathology.
- Pasture bloat dx.
- Within hours or a few days of access to pasture.
Animals uncomfortable with mild colic signs.
Abdominal distension (upper left side).
Rumen hypermotility first then hypomotility.
Tachypnoea, tachycardia, progressive resp./CV compromise»_space; DEATH within minutes of animal assuming lateral recumbency.
Mortality high in animals without tx. - Rumen contents depends on time of PM.
Caudal carcass pale.
Cranial carcass congested and haemorrhagic.
Lungs congested.
Oesophagus pale in thorax and congested in cervical portion. - Based on clinical signs and Hx in living animal.
Difficult at PM - always consider other causes of sudden death e.g. Anthrax.
- Pasture bloat tx.
- Pasture bloat prevention.
- Anti foaming agents.
- Poloxalene (Bloat Guard).
- Simethicone emulsion (Birp).
- Oils.
- Detergents.
Give meds via stomach tube, dilute or wash down into rumen as necessary, take care to avoid inhalation.
May inject anti-foaming agents directly into rumen in emergency. - Pasture management.
Regular administration of anti-foaming agents.
- Cause of grain bloat?
- What does grain bloat lead to?
- Feeding high quantities of rapidly fermentable carbohydrate, esp. finely milled cereals.
Grain overload.
Seen in feedlots, grain beef systems and after breaking into feed stores. - Ruminal acidosis, metabolic acidosis.
- Clinical signs of grain bloat.
- How is grain bloat diagnosed?
- Tx of grain bloat?
- Bloat, anorexia, dehydration, collapse, severe metabolic acidosis (tachypnoea, hyperpnoea), diarrhoea, death.
- Hx, clinical signs, rumen pH, plasma pH or TCO2.
- Emergency - rumenotomy to remove contents.
Correct ruminal and metabolic acidosis and dehydration - may require IV fluids.
Encourage feeding on forage
Rumen function stimulants e.g. Pro-rumen or Vetrumex.
Transfer of rumen contents from healthy cattle.
Consider on-farm emergency slaughter.
Free-gas bloat causes.
Anything that interferes with normal eructation.
- oesophageal obstruction.
- external pressure on oesophagus.
- pathology of the oesophagus or reticulum.
- conditions affecting smooth muscle function.
- poor management at weaning — may result in chronic rumenal tympany.
Clinical signs of free-gas bloat.
Increased intraruminal pressure resulting in bulging of left sub-lumbar fossa.
Additional signs follow from increased abdominal pressure as for pasture-bloat.
Additional specific signs related to underlying aetiology.
Free-gas bloat Tx.
Relieve obstruction or allow escape of gas by some other means.
- stomach tube.
- Probang.
- trocar and cannula.
- treat metabolic disease (milk fever).
- treat underlying cause.
Chronic ruminal distension.
Abdominal enlargement.
Weight loss.
+/- diarrhoea.
(Post-weaning diarrhoea syndrome).
Most common after weaning of artificially reared calves.
Syndrome not fully understood.
Multiple cases.
Diet.
Impaired eructation e.g. enlarged thoracic LNs.
May be seen in adults due to other conditions:
- chronic reticular adhesions.
- “Vagal indigestion”.
- sand impaction.
- alimentary tract carcinoma.
- rumeno-reticular Actinobacillosis.