Literature DB >> 31155250

Iron and laterality effects on healing of cautery disbudding wounds in dairy calves.

Sarah J J Adcock1, Savanah K Vieira1, Lorenzo Alvarez2, Cassandra B Tucker3.   

Abstract

Hot-iron disbudding, the process of cauterizing the horn buds of calves or goat kids at an early age to prevent horn growth, is routinely practiced in dairy production. The wounds take weeks to heal and are painful to touch throughout this time. Possible strategies to hasten the healing of disbudding wounds are not well understood, but the type of iron used may be an important factor to consider. When evaluating strategies to hasten healing, a within-subjects design may be preferable, but laterality effects might act as a potential source of variation and confounding in this type of experiment. Our objectives were to compare healing after disbudding with 2 commercially available irons, and to determine whether wounds healed differently on the left versus the right side of the head. Ten Holstein calves 4 to 10 d of age were disbudded using the Rhinehart X50A electric disbudder (Rhinehart Development Corp., Spencerville, IN) on one horn bud and the Portasol gas disbudder (Portasol USA, Elmira, OR) on the other; side (left vs. right) was balanced between treatments. We scored wounds daily for the presence of 6 tissue types: attached necrotic tissue, detached necrotic tissue, exudate, granulation, crust, and epithelium. Surface temperature and size of the wound were measured twice-weekly using thermal and digital photographs, respectively. The type of iron used did not affect latency to re-epithelialize, which took on average (mean ± standard deviation) 53 ± 3 d and 55 ± 3 d for Portasol and Rhinehart wounds, respectively (range: 40-70 d). However, compared with Portasol wounds, those from the Rhinehart had fewer days of granulation tissue and tended to have more days of detached necrotic tissue. The Portasol tip had a smaller total surface area than the Rhinehart, which may have resulted in a less severe burn, causing the necrotic tissue to fall off sooner. The left side tended to re-epithelialize faster than the right side (mean ± standard error: left 51 ± 3 d; right 57 ± 3 d) and have fewer days of crust. Left-sided wounds were also cooler and tended to be smaller than those on the right. To assess the external validity of these laterality effects in our primary experiment (experiment A), we analyzed wound healing data from 2 other disbudding studies, one on calves (experiment B) and one on goat kids (experiment C). We observed laterality effects in the opposite direction in Experiment B, but negligible effects in experiment C, indicating that the differences in laterality had low external validity; the biological meaning of this asymmetry is unclear. Nonetheless, if using a within-subjects design, asymmetries in wound healing should be considered to avoid confounding effects. In conclusion, wounds from both irons took 7 to 8 wk to heal, on average; other strategies to accelerate healing should be explored.
Copyright © 2019 American Dairy Science Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  animal welfare; cattle; dehorning; goat

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31155250     DOI: 10.3168/jds.2018-16121

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dairy Sci        ISSN: 0022-0302            Impact factor:   4.034


  4 in total

1.  Conditioned place preference reveals ongoing pain in calves 3 weeks after disbudding.

Authors:  Sarah J J Adcock; Cassandra B Tucker
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-03-02       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Injury alters motivational trade-offs in calves during the healing period.

Authors:  Sarah J J Adcock; Cassandra B Tucker
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-03-25       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  Evaluation of Horn Bud Wound Healing Following Cautery Disbudding of Dairy Calves With and Without the Use of Oxytetracycline Aerosol Spray.

Authors:  Rachel Ridgway; Joseph Neary; Andrea Turner; David C Barrett; Amy Gillespie
Journal:  Front Vet Sci       Date:  2022-02-24

4.  Mechanical Nociceptive Threshold, Tissue Alterations and Horn Growth in Calves after Injection of Isoeugenol or Clove Oil under the Horn Bud.

Authors:  Anna Juffinger; Julia Schoiswohl; Anna Stanitznig; Reinhild Krametter-Frötscher; Thomas Wittek; Susanne Waiblinger
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2021-03-15       Impact factor: 2.752

  4 in total

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