| Literature DB >> 21592395 |
Ditte B Rasmussen1, Katrine Fogsgaard, Christine M Røntved, Ilka C Klaas, Mette S Herskin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mastitis is a high incidence disease in dairy cows. The acute stage is considered painful and inflammation can lead to hyperalgesia and thereby contribute to decreased welfare. The aim of this study was to examine changes in nociceptive responses toward cutaneous nociceptive laser stimulation (NLS) in dairy cows with experimentally induced Escherichia coli mastitis, and correlate behavioral changes in nociceptive responses to clinical and paraclinical variables.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21592395 PMCID: PMC3114774 DOI: 10.1186/1751-0147-53-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Figure 1Laser simulation aimed at udder and hind legs. Graphic presentation of the position of the six single laser stimulations applied to the caudal part of the metatarsus on the hind legs and to the caudal part of the udder of dairy cows.
Ethogram of dairy cow behavior recorded during the tests of nociceptive responses
| Behavioral variable | Definition |
|---|---|
| Tail flick | The tail is flicked at least 5 cm to either side. A new event is recorded after a complete cycle of tail movement [ |
| Tail pressing | The cow is pressing the central part of the tail against the base of the udder [ |
| Muscle twitch | Contraction of single muscle group. A new event is recorded after a pause of at least 5 seconds. |
| Kicking | The hoof is thrusted against the floor or withdrawn at high speed [ |
| Lifting leg | The hoof is lifted from the floor in a calm manner [ |
| Stepping | The leg is moved, but the hoof is not lifted from the floor. |
| No response | The leg is not moved within the temporal limits of the test [ |
| Moving hind leg | At least one hind leg is moved. The hoof does not have to be lifted from the floor. |
| Licking leg | The cow licks the exposed hind leg or attempts to do so by turning the head against the hind leg. |
| Licking body | The cow licks other body parts than the hind legs. |
| Lying down | The cow changes posture from standing to lying. |
Figure 2The development of rectal temperature, white blood cells, somatic cell count and number of . From one day before (day 0) until 10 days after inoculation with Escherichia coli into the udder of 7 dairy cows. Plots with different letters differ significantly. Error bars show SE.
Figure 3Anorexia, udder and milk appearance. Scaling of anorexia, udder and milk appearance from one day before (day 0) until 10 days after inoculation with E. coli into the udder of 7 dairy cows. Anorexia, udder and milk appearance were scaled ranging from 1 to 4 with 1 being normal and 4 highly affected. Plots with different letters differ significantly. Error bars show SE.
Figure 4Behavioral responses toward nociceptive laser stimulation. Effects of Escherichia coli inoculation in the left front quarter on behavioral responses toward nociceptive laser stimulation at caudal udder or hind leg of dairy cows. Induction of E. coli mastitis was done after measurements on day 0, why day 0 serves as control day. Results are presented as mean and SE from 7 cows. Plots with different letters differ significantly.