fbpx
Print this page
Friday, 15 October 2021 06:55

Record, treat mastitis

Written by  Staff Reporters
Collect milk samples for culture to identify the bacteria involved. Collect milk samples for culture to identify the bacteria involved.

Clinical cases of mastitis are costly and significantly disrupt the milking routine.

Clinical cases that are missed can dramatically increase the bulk milk somatic cell counts (SCC) because they produce very high numbers of somatic cells.

Early detection and treatment of clinical mastitis in the calving period reduces the risk of severe cases developing. It also reduces the likelihood of infection being passed to other cows, and the development of chronic infections.

By recording cow identity and antibiotics used for all cases, the numbers of clinical cases and responses to treatment can be monitore.d

A swollen quarter will appear larger than other quarters on the same cow or may cause the cow to appear lame.

Cows with suspect udders should have their udders felt, or palpated, to check for hardness, heat and swelling. Foremilk should be stripped and checked for signs of mastitis.

Milk containing bacteria can be spread from cow-to-cow when stripping cows.

Gloves should always be worn when checking cows for mastitis, as they are easier than bare hands to rinse and keep clean.

A good practice is to disinfect gloved hands after stripping a cow with clinical mastitis e.g. by dipping gloved hands in a 1% iodophor solution or rubbing with medicated teat wipes.

Collect milk samples for culture to identify the bacteria involved.

Milk culture samples are recommended to help identify which bacteria are involved, if a herd problem emerges.

The right technique must be used to collect samples, otherwise the samples will be contaminated by bacteria from the outside of the teats.

Ask your veterinarian to show you the correct technique. Milk samples can be collected from clinical cases before starting treatments, and stored frozen.

A selection of these samples can be sent to laboratory at a later date if:

  • Cows are not responding to treatment e.g. more than 20% of cases are receiving a second course of treatment.
  • If concerned about the number of clinical cases occuring during calving e.g. exceeding 4 clinical cases in the past 50 calvings.
  • If concerned about the number of clinical cases during lactation.

Hold Milk Back

Ensure each cow has exceeded her antibiotic dry cow treatment (DCT) minimum dry period before putting her milk in the vat or selling her calf.

Ensure that milk from the colostrum period (first eight milkings) is not included in the supply vat.

For milk quality reasons, all cows should have their colostrum milk withheld from the vat for at least eight milkings after calving (10 milkings for heifers and induced cows).

Different arrangements are in place for farmers that supply colostrum to the dairy company.

For cows that have received an antibiotic DCT, a withholding period for milk after calving is specified for each product.

Accurate record keeping is critical for withholding period management and preventing DCT residues from causing an inhibitory substance (IS) grade.

All DCT products are registered with a specified minimum dry period after treatment. If a cow calve within this time, witholding periods for milk and calf meat may be much longer than in the usual situation.

Withold milk for recommended number of milkings and ensure udders are completely milked out. At the start of the season, when the number of cows producing milk for the vat is low, cows with undetected clinical mastitis can cause the bulk milk SCC to increase dramatically and may cause a SCC grade.

Check all cows with a rapid mastitis test (RMT) before moving them from the colostrum herd to the milk supply herd. High SCC cows (cows with a positive RMT result) should be kept in the colostrum herd for an extra 2-4 milking to allow the mastitis to self-cure or turn clinical, and reduce the risk of a SCC grade.

More like this

Breeding mastitis-resistant cows

Selecting for disease- resistant cows has become a reality for farmers around the globe as genetic developments continue to advance.

Knowing bugs means fewer drugs

A mastitis management company claims to deliver the fastest and most accurate mastitis testing available at scale for New Zealand dairy farmers.

Vaccine targets environmental mastitis

A vaccine, claimed to be the first specific product against Streptococcus uberis, the most common cause of environmental mastitis in New Zealand, was launched here last month.

Keeping bacterial infections away

Mastitis is an inflammation of the udder. In cows, it is usually caused by bacteria which have entered through the teat canal and moved to the mammary tissues.

Finding cows with subclinical mastitis

An on-farm trial using new testing technology shows around half of high somatic cell count (SCC) cows could be positive with serious undetected Staphylococcus aureus infections.

Featured

Women 'dominate vet profession'

Females are dominating the veterinary profession worldwide and many farmers are welcoming this change in the composition of the profession, says Britain's Chief Veterinary Officer (CVO) Professor Christine Middlemiss.

High level of herbicide resistance

A five-year randomised survey of herbicide resistance on New Zealand arable farms has found widespread high levels of resistance - with 71% of farms affected in the worst-hit region - South Canterbury.

Editorial: Farm salaries get a boost

OPINION: The recent Federated Farmers / Rabobank 2024 Farming Salaries Report revealed strong growth in farm salaries over the past two years.

Fonterra appoints new CFO

Fonterra has appointed a new chief financial officer, seven months after its last CFO’s shock resignation.

National

Green but not much grass!

Dairy farmers in the lower North Island are working on protecting next season, according to Federated Farmers dairy chair Richard…

Council lifeline for A&P Show

Christchurch City Council and the Canterbury Agricultural and Pastoral Association (CAPA) have signed an agreement which will open more of…

Struggling? Give us a call

ASB head of rural banking Aidan Gent is encouraging farmers to speak to their banks when they are struggling.

Machinery & Products

Tractor, harvester IT comes of age

Over the last halfdecade, digital technology has appeared to be the “must-have” for tractor and machinery companies, who believe that…