What is the difference between early, delayed, and late postnatal disease? What are common causes of each?
EARLY = within 48 hours, malnutrition, hypothermia
DELAYED = within 2-7 days, infection (colibacillosis)
LATE = within 1-4 weeks, enterotoxemia
What 3 things in calves should be checked for at each feeding? What diagnostics are recommended?
rectal temp, hydration (sunken eyes, dry mouth, cold extremities, no suckling), RR and effort
How is scours treated?
MILD - oral electrolytes BID between milk feedings for 2-3 days
MODERATE/SEVERE - IV fluids and electrolytes, antibiotics, antiinflammatories
How is pneumonia treated?
MILD - antibiotics
MODERATE/SEVERE - antibiotics, antiinflammatories, supportive therapy
What factors from the mother, calf, and environment predispose a calf to developing disease?
MOTHER - parasitism, mastitis, nutrition, dystocia, breed and species variations, vaccination
CALF - umbilical cord infection, passive immunity (colostrum), rearing, overfeeding, time of weaning
ENVIRONMENT - herd size, improper building, over-crowding, poor sanitation, poor ventilation, high humidity, exposure to hot or cold extremes
What is the most common cause of death in young calves? When is risk of development highest? In what calves is this most common?
diarrhea –> dehydration, electrolyte loss (K, bicarb, Na) –> preventable with good management!
birth to 1 month old
housed calves in the winter
What is the pathogenesis of calf diarrhea? What 3 things does this result in? What causes death?
loss of large amonts of water and electrolytes (Na, K, Cl, bicarb)
acidosis and dehydration
How does diarrhea typically develop in calves?
Pathogenesis of diarrhea based on cause:
What 4 things should be observed for in cases of scours?
check the calf, NOT the feces
What is the purpose of colostrum in preventing calf diarrhea?
provides passive immunity to protect calves for a month after birth
What 3 things does the transfer of maternal immunoglobulins to calves depend on?
What are 7 common causes of poor colostrum quality/quantity?
What are 4 possible causes of colostrum ingestion failure?
What are 6 causes of colostral absorption failure?
What is calf scour?
increased frequency, fluidity, or volume of fecal excretion
What are the most common symptoms associated with calf scours?
What are the 3 major metabolic effects of calf scour?
What are the 4 major bacterial causes of calf scour?
What are the 3 major parasitic causes of calf scour?
What are the 7 major viral causes of calf scour?
Age of occurrence of enteropathogens in calves:
What is the most common cause of newborn calf diarrhea? What is the course of disease like? What is critical to survival?
enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC)
rapid - weakness –> diarrhea –> dehydration –> death within 24 hours
fluid support (antibiotics rarely affect outcome)
How is ETEC infection eliminated from a herd?
vaccination of dry cows and good colostrum