| Literature DB >> 33363328 |
Champak Bhakat1, A Mohammad2, D K Mandal1, A Mandal3, S Rai1, A Chatterjee4, M K Ghosh4, T K Dutta4.
Abstract
Mastitis in dairy cattle is the most common management disorder that causes higher economic losses by lowering production and quality of milk leads to substantial economical loss. The aim of this article was to review worldwide important advances in strategies to control mastitis for production augmentation in dairy cattle. Many scientists worked to identify effective strategies to control mastitis caused by Streptococcus agalactiae, Staphylococcus aureus, and others. It is necessary to identify mechanisms of infection, define clinical and subclinical states of disease, determine exposure time, and identify pathogen-specific characteristics. Evolvement of management strategies that incorporated hygienic procedures (animal, floor, and milkman), post milking standing period of animal and strategic use of antibiotic or herbal therapy at dry-off, nutritional supplementation, fly control, body condition score optimization, etc., resulted in widespread control of mastitis. The udder, teat of animal, scientific management of milking, automatic milking procedure, genetic selection are considered as important factors to control mastitis. As farm management changed, scientists were directed to redefine control of mastitis caused by opportunistic pathogens of environmental sources and have sought to explore management strategies which will maintain animal well-being in a judicial way. Although significant advances in mastitis management have been made changing herd structure, changing climatic scenario and more rigorous milk processing standards ensure that mastitis will remain important issue for future research. Copyright: © Bhakat, et al.Entities:
Keywords: dairy cattle; hygiene; mastitis; milk production; pathogen; strategies
Year: 2020 PMID: 33363328 PMCID: PMC7750217 DOI: 10.14202/vetworld.2020.2364-2370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet World ISSN: 0972-8988
Effective strategies to control heifer’s mastitis [6-10].
| Sl. no. | Researchers | Year | Salient findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Singh | 2020 | At lower Gangetic regional village level Jersey crossbred heifer is susceptible to udder problem [ |
| 2. | Salvador | 2014 | Define prevalence and control of IMI in dairy heifers. Although the milk appears normal, heifer with subclinical IMI produce less milk and with compromised quality [ |
| 3. | Trinidad | 1990 | A high prevalence of IMI caused by |
| 4. | Iraguha | 2015 | Subclinical mastitis can lead to a 10-20% decrease in milk production. In addition, it has an undesirable effect on the constituents and nutritional value of milk, rendering it of low quality, and less fit for processing [ |
| 5. | De Vliegher | 2012 | Although heifers have a relatively low prevalence of infection with major pathogens, many are colonized by CNS [ |
Dry cow management strategies [11-19].
| Sl. no. | Researchers | Year | Salient findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Singh | 2020 | Find out that alteration of dry period feeding management can improve dry cow BCS, thus lead to lower NEB, milk SCC, and maintain better udder health [ |
| 2. | Bhakat | 2019 | Repetition of mastitis occurrence is a major constraint for dairy development in hot humid tropical regions [ |
| 3. | Bhakat | 2016 | The Log 10 SCC (cells/ml) was significantly (p<0.01) higher in IMI cows (6.55±0.05) as compared to no-IMI Jersey crossbred cows (4.05±0.04) at hot humid tropic [ |
| 4. | Kumari | 2019 | Dry cow therapy (intra-mammary) using various herbal preparation with internal and external teat sealant can be alternate management practices to control mastitis during post-calving period and also concluded that herbal fly control measures significantly (p<0.01) reduced sub-clinical mastitis cases [ |
| 5. | Hillerton and Kliem | 2002 | Developed and introduced a commercially non-antibiotic internal teat sealant [ |
| 6. | Cameron | 2014 | The continued decline of IMI caused by |
| 7. | Huijps and Hogeveen | 2007 | Economic models have demonstrated that decision to use either selective or comprehensive antibiotic DCT has highly farm specific [ |
Lactating cow’s mastitis management strategies [20-30].
| Sl. no. | Researchers | Year | Salient findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Paul | 2020 | Optimization of BCS at calving time can improve udder health status in lactating cows [ |
| 2. | Barkema | 2006 | Emphasized that the prognosis for treatment of |
| 3. | Barkema | 2006 | Find out about cow, pathogen and treatment factors that contribute to therapeutic success of cows infected with |
| 4. | Singh | 2020 | The pre and postpartum alpha-tocopherol supplementation improved udder health status, milk yield, body condition score of lactating cows at tropical lower Gangetic region [ |
| 5. | Lago | 2011a | The increased proportion of culture-negative clinical cases and increased diversity of etiological agents have encouraged development of selective treatment protocols [ |
| 6. | Ruegg | 2017 | Recommended for treatment of clinical mastitis are based on targeted antibiotic usage for most Gram-positive cases while allowing time for spontaneous cure of most other cases [ |
| 7. | Kuipers | 2016 | Mastitis remains mostly common bacterial disease in maximum dairy farms and consequently, mastitis treatment and prevention account for majority of antimicrobials administered to adult dairy cows [ |
| 8. | Kumari | 2018 | Find out that supplementation of trisodium citrate (at 10 mg/kg bw) to lactating cow can reduce the occurrences of subclinical mastitis [ |
| 9. | Kumari | 2020 | Adoption of scientific management practices such as full hand milking procedure, post-milking standing period of 35 min standing of cow, and increased hygiene (cow, milkers, and shed) status of lactating cow can significantly reduce the occurrences of subclinical mastitis [ |