vaccination programs for cattle 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Dairy:
Vaccination Programs for Calves
- neonatal diarrhea agents, timing, how to vaccinate??

A

Disease: Neonatal diarrhea
* Agents: E. coli, rota/corona virus, Cryptosporidia, Salmonella, Eimeria; (BVD?)
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Time of disease
* 1st week, up to 2 months of age
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When to vaccinate?
* Cows (dam) in late pregnancy for passive transfer
* Efficacy depends on colostrum feeding/management

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2
Q

Vaccination Programs for Dairy Calves
- for respiratory disease
> agents, timing, when/how to vaccinate

A

Disease: Respiratory disease (BRD)
* Agents: BRSV, Mannheimia hemolytica, Histophilus somni, Pasteurella multocida, PI3, IBR, BVD
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Time of disease
* 3 weeks to 4 months of age
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When to vaccinate?
* Calves
* Before challenge? 1 to 5 weeks of age?
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* Intra-nasal BRSV/IBR/PI-3 +/- MH/PM preferred for short-term protection
(nasal vaccine a good way to stimulate local immunity
> probably better than injection for this purpose
> less interference will circulating antibody)

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3
Q

Vaccination Programs for Cows
- for abortion
> agents, timing, when to vaccinate?

A

Disease: Abortion
* Agents: BVD, IBR, Leptospirosis, Neospora, etc
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Time of disease
* Throughout pregnancy; most detected from 3 to 9 months gestation
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When to vaccinate?
* Ideally, before breeding (assuming protection lasts for 9 – 12+ months)

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4
Q

Vaccination Programs for Cattle
- for BVD
> what issues does this agent cause?
> who is at risk
> when to vaccinate?

A

BVD
* Abortion; congenital anomalies
* PI’s
* Clinical disease (fever, diarrhea, death)
* Immune suppression and 2o disease risk
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Who is at risk?
* Pregnant cows/heifers
* Any animal
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When to vaccinate?
* Before breeding
* Before exposure? Cattle movements/mixing

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5
Q

Vaccination Programs for Dairy Cows
* Core Program = ???
* why?

A

Core Program = BVD + IBR
* Exposure is common
* Consequences are substantial
> PI > abortion > clinical disease
> Epidemics of severe clinical BVD are possible in unvaccinated cattle
* Addition of other antigens to a program is based on an assessment of risk

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6
Q

Vaccination of young calves - does it do anything? considerations?
when to use?

A

Calves can and do respond to vaccination even with maternal antibody present
* Calves that received inadequate colostrum respond better to vaccination
* Calves may not have a measurable antibody response to vaccination < 4 months old, but may still be protected against clinical disease when challenged
> BVD; +/- BRSV
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* Vaccination of calves induces immune memory and better response to subsequent vaccination or challenge
> BVD, IBR, PI-3, Mannheimia hemolytica, Leptospirosis, (BRSV)
* IF pre- or early post-weaning respiratory disease is a problem, MLV vaccination pre-weaning is worth considering
> Systemic 5-way MLV at 2 and/or 5 weeks of age did not reduce BRD in dairy calves
> Intra-nasal (IN) BRSV/IBR/PI-3 vaccine +/- reduced clinical BRD; reduced lung consolidation

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7
Q

Vaccination – Dairy Herd
* Current best practice

A

1) Minimum of 2 doses of MLV vaccine between 6 months old and breeding (before she is pregnant)
* Practically means vaccinating heifers at least 3 times per year
* Use of MLV in dry cows might increase duration of maternal Ab effect on calf response to vaccination (?)
* Vaccination < 6 months old is for short-term clinical disease protection
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2) MLV to open cows “annually” (as cows are ~ 1 month postpartum)
* Means vaccinating groups at least monthly
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± 3) Coliform mastitis vaccination (2 or 3 doses (per label) “annually” in the dry period (last 2 months of gestation ± 2-4 weeks postpartum

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8
Q

How are beef cow-calf herds different from dairy herds?

A
  • Seasonal calving and breeding
  • All cows should calve within 60-90 days
    > Degree of confinement (time of year) varies
  • Calves remain with dam until fall (~ 6 months old)
  • Raised on pasture
  • Handling is typically substantial work
    > Handling facilities may be limiting
  • Cows and weaned calves are managed as groups
  • Allows Vx to be both SCHEDULED and STRATEGIC
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9
Q

Common Infectious Diseases of Mature Beef Cattle with vaccines available

A
  • BVD
  • IBR
  • Leptospirosis
  • Pasture footrot
  • IBK (pinkeye)
  • Trichomoniasis
  • Rabies
  • Neospora
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10
Q

Common Infectious Diseases of Mature Beef Cattle with NO vaccines available

A

Vaccines not available
* Johne’s
* Winter dysentery
* Enz Bov Leukosis
* Mastitis
* Metritis

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11
Q

Common Infectious Diseases of Suckling Beef Calves
- with vaccines available

A
  • Neonatal calf diarrhea
  • Enzootic pneumonia
  • Pasture footrot
  • IBK (pinkeye)
  • Interstitial pneumonia (BRSV)
  • Blackleg
  • Malignant edema
  • Tetanus
  • Rabies
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12
Q

Common Infectious Diseases of Suckling Beef Calves
- with NO vaccines available

A
  • Omphalophlebitis
  • Meningitis
  • Septic arthritis
  • Verminous pneumonia
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13
Q

Common Infectious Diseases of Weaned Beef Calves and Yearlings (Feedlot)
- with vaccines available

A

BRD
* M.haemolytica
* Histophilosis
* BVD
* IBR
* BRSV
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* Pasture footrot
* IBK (pinkeye)
* Malignant edema
* Tetanus

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14
Q

Common Infectious Diseases of Weaned Beef Calves and Yearlings (Feedlot)
- with vaccines NOT available

A
  • CPPS (M. bovis pneumonia + arthritis)
  • Septic arthritis
  • Castration infections
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15
Q

“Value-Added” Beef Calves
* Prevaccinated, costs and considerations

A

Prevaccinated
* Sell for $0.08 to 0.13 / lb premium over comparable in special sales (typically ~ $45 per head)
* Prevaccination likely profitable to the cow-calf producer IF calves are marketed in special Pre-Vx sales
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special Pre-Vx sales
* Feedlots, on average, will experience 30% reduction in treatment rate for UBRD
(e.g. 25% to 18%)
* Does this make them a good buy for the feedlot?
* NOT NECESSARILY - treating the extra sick ones (7%) may be more cost-effective. Depends on feedlot ownerʼs risk aversion, disease management skills

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16
Q

“Value-Added” Beef Calves
* Preconditioned

A
  • Preconditioned = prevaccinated + weaned at least 30 days
  • Cow-calf producers often do not have the facilities to separate and house weaned calves
  • Typically no additional premium (per lb) over prevaccinated but do have extra weight to sell (if managed properly)
  • Experience 85% reduction (e.g. 25% to 3%) in treatment rate (in the feedlot) versus non-pre-conditioned
  • Probable reduction in mortality in feedlot
17
Q

Feedlot Vaccination - is it worth it?

A

“Too much, too late” (?)
E.g. 5-way MLV (IBR, 2 types BVD, PI-3, BRSV) + H. somni + M. haemolytica bacterin/toxoid + 8 clostridial antigens Given together on arrival
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Many/most of these antigens contribute to important diseases for which these cattle are at increased risk
But unclear if
* Stressed/immune-compromised animals respond well
* There is time for vaccine response vs. exposure/risk
* There is antagonism of multiple antigens at once

18
Q

Feedlot Vaccination reccomendations

A
  • On arrival (most common) or
  • Wait 28 days (smaller, single pen feedlots filling in less than 10 days)
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    1. IBR – recommended
  • Because very little seroconversion naturally by day 28 and high probability of the disease in later feeding period
  • even if prevaccinated on c-c operation, do it again (MLV)
  • repeat between 30 to 90 days on feed in continuous flow, multi-pen feedlots
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    2. BVD – probably (better used in prevacc)
  • Pathogen is likely important in feedlot but on-arrival Vx efficacy is unclear
  • efforts should be directed at PI prevention in breeding herds
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    3. Clostridial – recommended
  • Low risk but very inexpensive and boosts primary that most had as young calves
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    4. Mannheimia – Only in large, calf (vs. yearling) feedlots
  • tends to reduce relapse rate and mortality where pen-checking is less intense
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    5. H. somni – used commonly in large, calf feedlots even though vaccination is, at best, marginally effective
  • Because:
    > “You donʼt have to explain why you didnʼt vaccinate when H. somni deaths occur” - Eugene Janzen
    > It might be helpful if the arrival vaccination is boostering a previously administered primary vaccination as a calf (?)
    > Very inexpensive
19
Q

Example of Dairy Herd Vaccination Programs for BVD, IBR (“5-way”)

A
  • 1-8 weeks old: IN BRSV/IBR
  • 6m old: MLV
  • 12m old: MLV
  • 12-14m later: MLV when non-pregnant; ~30d after cavling
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    Can give MLV to pregnant cows IF previously immunized (before pregnancy) with MLV