| Literature DB >> 24031528 |
Reneé Pieterse1, Svetoslav D Todorov.
Abstract
Mastitis is considered to be the most costly disease affecting the dairy industry. Management strategies involve the extensive use of antibiotics to treat and prevent this disease. Prophylactic dosages of antibiotics used in mastitis control programmes could select for strains with resistance to antibiotics. In addition, a strong drive towards reducing antibiotic residues in animal food products has lead to research in finding alternative antimicrobial agents. In this review we have focus on the pathogenesis of the mastitis in dairy cows, existing antibiotic treatments and possible alternative for application of bacteriocins from lactic acid bacteria in the treatment and prevention of this disease.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic; bacteriocin; food safety; mastitis; milk
Year: 2010 PMID: 24031528 PMCID: PMC3768644 DOI: 10.1590/S1517-83822010000300003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Braz J Microbiol ISSN: 1517-8382 Impact factor: 2.476
Characteristics of common mastitis-causing pathogens, invasiveness and infection
| Pathogen | Type of mastitis | Infection |
|---|---|---|
| Mostly subclinical, but also clinical, recurrent and chronic if treatment is not effected soon enough | Highly contagious. Primarily infect duct system and lower portion of the udder on the surface of epithelium. Causes injury and scarring to duct system and clogging results in accumulation of milk in ducts and reduction in milk production. Involution occurs (65). | |
| Clinical acute | Environmental source. Bacterium can adhere to and be taken up into cells without losing viability and therefore persist in tissue and may be protected from antibiotic therapy. Bacterium does not cause severe permanent injury to epithelial tissue (13). | |
| Clinical acute | Environmental source. Able to adhere to and is taken up by epithelium cells and persist intracellularly for extended periods. Responsible for chronic infection but does not cause severe tissue injury. One of the most commonly isolated organisms during non-lactating period (90) | |
| Subclinical, clinical or chronic, in severe cases gangrenous mastitis | Highly contagious. Bacterium adheres invades the deeper tissue of the alveoli where it becomes encapsulated by fibrous tissue and abscesses form, thus walling-off the bacterium. Involution occurs. In severe cases, toxins can cause blood vessel constriction and clotting cutting off blood supply to tissue resulting in gangrenous mastitis (65). | |
| Acute clinical (toxaemia) mastitis, may develop chronic mastitis | Environmental, fairly common due to high incidence of bacteria on host and environment. Bacteria invade tissue in teat and gland cistern. Tissue damage occurs in teat cistern, gland cistern and large ducts. Large influx of somatic cells through damaged tissue results in formation of clots in the milk. Usually no long-term effects to alveoli occur and host immune system often clears up infection. (65) |
Recommended remedies for lactating cow treatment, withdrawal period and activity spectrum (24, 42).
| Remedy | Milk withdrawal period | Antibiotic Composition | Activity Spectrum (if sensitive) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cloxamast LC | 3 days | Cloxacillin, ampicillin | Septic mastitis. |
| Curalox LC | 3 days | Cloxacillin, ampicillin | |
| Dispolac RX 4 | 24 hours after blue colour has disappeared | Penicillin, dihyrostreptomycin | |
| Lactaclox | 2.5 days | Cloxacillin | |
| Lactaciliin | 3 days | Ampicillin | |
| Lincocin Forte | 2.5 days | Lincomycin, neomycin | |
| Mastijet Forte | 4 days | Oxytetracycline, neomycin, bacitracin, cortisone | |
| Nafpenzal MC | 6 milkings in treatment + 3 milkings after treatment | Penicillin, dyhrostreptomycin, nafcillin | |
| Noroclox QR | 24 hours after blue colour has disappeared | Cloxicillin, blue tracer dye | |
| Pendiclox Blue | 24 hours after blue colour has disappeared | Cloxicillin, ampicillin, blue tracer dye | |
| Penstrep 300 D | 24 hours after blue colour has disappeared | Penicillin, dihydrostreptomycin, blue tracer dye | Acute mastitis. |
| Rilexine LC | 4 days | Cephalexin, neomycin, cortisone | Acute & chronic mastitis |
| Spec Form Forte | 3 days | Penicillin, dihydrostreptomycin, novobiocin, polymyxin B, cortisone | Acute or chronic mastitis. |
| Streptocillin | 24 hours after blue colour has disappeared | Penicillin, dihyrostreptomycine, blue tracer dye |
Recommended remedies for dry cow treatment, withdrawal period and activity spectrum (24).
| Remedy | Milk withdrawal period | Antibiotic Composition | Activity Spectrum (if sensitive) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bovaclox DC | 30 days | Cloxacillin, ampicillin | |
| Cephudder | 21 days | Cephapirin | |
| Cepravin DC | 4 days | Cephalexin | |
| Curaclox DC | 2.5 days | Cloxacillin, ampicillin | |
| Curaclox DC XTRA | 4 days | Cloxacillin, ampicillin | |
| Dispolac DC | None specified | Penicillin, dihydrostreptomycin | |
| Dri Cillin | 2.5 days | Cloxacillin, ampicillin | |
| Masticillin DC | 28 days + 10 milkings after calving | Cloxacillin | |
| Masticlox DC | 2.5 days | Cloxacillin | |
| Masticlox Plus DC | None specified | Cloxacillin, ampicillin | |
| Masticlox Plus DC EXTRA | 4 days | Cloxacillin, ampicillin | |
| Nafpenzal DC | 3 milkings | Penicillin, dihydrostreptomycin | |
| Neomastitar DC | 5 weeks | Penicillin, neomycin | |
| Noroclox DC | 2.5 days | Cloxacillin | |
| Noroclox DC EXTRA | 2.5 days | Cloxacillin | |
| Orbenin EXTRA DC | 4 days | Cloxacillin, blue trace dye | |
| Pendiclox DC | 24 hours after blue colour disappears | Cloxacillin, ampicillin, blue tracer dye | |
| Penstrep DC | 24 hours after blue colour disappears | Penicillin, dihydrostreptomycin | |
| Rilexine 500DC | 4 weeks | Cephalexin, neomycin |
Potential medical and veterinary applications of some bacteriocins
| Gram- positive bacteria | |||
| Nisin | Treat peptic ulcer diseaseAntimicrobial activity in medical devices such as cathetersTreat | (7,31,35,68,81) | |
| Lacticin 3147 | Treat mastitis in cattle | (73) | |
| Galliderm | Treat skin infections such as acne | (44) | |
| Epidermin | Treat skin infections such as acne | (1) | |
| Mutacin B-Ny266 | Bacterial infection caused by methicillin-resistant staphylococci | (57) | |
| Tomicid | Streptococcoal respiratory infections (Scarlet Fever) in children | (12,32) | |
| Gram-negative bacteria | |||
| Microcins J25 and 24 | Treat | (75,102) | |
| Colicins E1, E4, E7, E8, K &S4 | Treat haemorrhagic colitis and haemolytic uremic syndrome cause by | (43) | |
Performance data for nisin-based germicidal teat sanitizer (81).
| 61.8 % | |
| 98.6 % | |
| 85.5 % | |
| 67.1 % | |
| 76.5 % |
Comparative skin irritation to rabbit skin after exposure to teat sanitizer.
| Amibicin N® (nisin-based sanitizer, 1x concentration) | 0.21 | 0.30 |
| Amibicin N® (nisin-based sanitizer, 12x concentration) | 0.09 | 0.04 |
| 1 % Iodophor | 0.5 | 3.34 |
| 5 % Clorohexidine digluconate | 0.38 | 2.34 |
Clinical mastitis and recovery of S. dysgalactiae in non-clinical mastitis in quarters after treatment with the teat seal only and the teat seal plus lacticin 3147 (73).
| Teat seal | 33 | 16 (48.5 %) | 6 (18.2 %) |
| Teat seal plus lacticin 3147 | 35 | 3 (8.6 %) | 0 (0 %) |
The effect of teat seal plus lacticin 3147 in eliminating S. aureus in artificially infected cows. Shedding evaluated after 18h (93).
| 1.7 × 103 | 32 768 | UntreatedTeat seal + lacticin 3147 | 2929 | 194 | 34.586.2 |
| 6.8 × 103 | 32 768 | UntreatedTeat seal + lacticin 3147 | 2020 | 1611 | 20.045.0 |