Cattle Urinary Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What is the taxonomy of lepto in cattle and what is it commonly referred to as?

A

•Complicated taxonomy

–Leptospira borgpetersenii serovar hardjo-bovis

–Leptospira interrogans servovar hardjo-prajitno

•Commonly referred to as

Leptospira Hardjo

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2
Q

What is the prevalence of lepto in uk cattle?

A

Very common

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3
Q

–Compare and contrast with leptospirosis in dogs

A

–Lepto in cattle is completely different! Do not confused with ARF and liver disease in dogs and cats

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4
Q

What are the key infectious cattle diseases? (6)

A

–Lepto, BVD, IBR, Johnes, bTB, Neospora

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5
Q

What are the clinical signs of chornic/endemic lepto?

A

•Reproductive

–Late stage abortion

–Abort 12 weeks after infection

–Reduced “fertility”

•Lepto cow – less progesterone produced and less obvious oestrus

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6
Q

What are the clinical signs of acute lepto?

A
  • Often sub-clinical- rare to see
  • “Flabby bag”

–Sudden milk drop – udder which should be full of milk suddenly has none so is flabby!

–Pyrexia

  • Abort after infection
  • Acute cases are dropping off – rare to see in practice
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7
Q

What are the risk factors for lepto? (4)

A
  • Open herds
  • Shared bulls - venereal
  • Sheep
  • •Shared watercourses (less important; some people think you can find in river and streams) possible if they drink here when cow further up
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8
Q

Where is lepto found in the cow?

Where is it shed?

Where is it absorbed?

A
  • Found in kidneys
  • Shed in urine
  • Absorbed across mucous membranes
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9
Q

When does lepto increase?

A

•Increases at grazing

–See AB go up

–During the spring/summer

Due to the change in the urine

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10
Q

How do we diagnose lepto? (2)

A

–ELISA

  • Use for monitoring – greater persistence
  • Bulk milk ELISA available

–Give you an idea if the herd has been exposed!

–Can sense increase

•Wide inconclusive value – often end up testing twice

–Microscopic agglutination test (MAT)

•Use for suspected acute cases

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11
Q

Can we vaccinate against lepto?

A

–Limit shedding *VPH consideration*. ZOONOTIC! People at the parlour are most at risk

–Improve fertility at herd level and minimise the amount of disease we see

–If they aren’t vaccinating – advise this!

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12
Q

How can we treat lepto?

A

–Supportive and antibiotics (P&S, oxytet) in acute case

•Unlikely to see acute cases

–Traditionally high doses of streptomycin to eliminate from urinary tract

  • E.g. Ab positive bull
  • Too higher value to cull them you could do this
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13
Q

How can you revent againt lepto?

A

–Biosecurity – don’t buy it in if you haven’t got it, don’t but in bulls without testing

–Reduce risk factors – e.g. showing, open herd

–Vaccinate

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14
Q

What are these urine samples showing?

A
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15
Q
  • A 2nd parity beef suckler cow, 6 months in calf, from an extensive grazing herd on Bodmin Moor in Cornwall
  • Farmer calls to say urine looks like red wine
  • Differential diagnoses?

Split into haemoglobinuria (5) an haematuria (5)

A

•Haemoglobinuria

–Babesiosis

–Bacilliary haemoglobinuria (Clostridia)

–Periparturient haemoglobinuria

–Copper toxicity

–Kale poisoning

•Haematuria

–Acute bracken poisoning

–Enzootic haematuria/Bladder tumour (Bracken poisoning)

–Pyelonephritis

–Urinary calculi

–Other tumours

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16
Q

What diagnostics do we start with when a cow presents with urinary complaints?

A

History

Clinical exam

Uine analysis

17
Q
  • A 2nd parity beef suckler cow, 6 months in calf, from an extensive grazing herd on Bodmin Moor in Cornwall
  • Farmer calls to say urine looks like red wine

What is most likely and what do we do next?

A
  • Likely Babesiosis (take blood sample)
  • Assess anaemia (Clinical signs/PCV)

–Imidocarb (care re: withdrawl)

–Blood transfusion if necessary

18
Q
  • A 5th lactation dairy cow, calved 42 days presented at the end of a routine fertility visit because she is “unwell”
  • The cow urinates before your examination and there is pus present in the urine
  • Differential diagnoses? (4)
A
  • Endometritis
  • Vaginitis
  • Cystitis
  • Pyelonephritis
19
Q

How do we differentiate between pus from urinary vs repro tract?

A

–Vaginal examination

–Catheterisation

–Ultrasonography

20
Q

How do we differentiate between a problem renally vs bladder? (4)

A

–Clinical exam

–Rectal examination

–Ultrasonography

–Biochemistry

•Creatinine NOT urea in ruminants

21
Q
  • Pyrexia, painful, swollen left kidney on rectal examination
  • Vaginal examination normal
  • Pus on catheterised urine sample

What is most likely and what do we do next?

A
  • Likely pyelonephritis
  • Treatment with antibiotics

–Penicillin (long duration – 10 days?)

22
Q
  • 6th lactation dairy cow, chronic lameness and two cases of mastitis this lactation. Losing weight, no diarrhoea, clinical exam NAD
  • +++ protein in urine

What Urinary disease is most likely? What would your thoughts be if this cow also had D++?

A
  • Diarrhoea – think Johnes!. Johnes loose weight as it a PLE. Loos protein and lean BW.
  • So similar to PLE but in urinary – PLN. Kidney disease can cause protein loss. Rare in cattle but would completely miss this.
  • Chronic sick cows – protein in urine would mean you wouldn’t miss this!!

•Glomerulonephritis

–Protein losing nephropathy

– more likely from history as lots of chronic infections. Lots of AB-AG complexes that can precipitate out of the kidney! Not v common, But you would find on dipstick.

23
Q

Complete this table

A