Difference between revisions of "Cattle Medicine Q&A 06"

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Single cases of bluetongue were first reported in the UK during August 2007. The most important differential diagnosis is foot and mouth disease, where the infection causes profuse salivation, erosions/ulcers in the mouth, lameness, and fever spread rapidly to affect all cattle on the premises within days. Other important differential diagnoses include IBR (group or herd) and malignant catarrhal fever (usually individual cattle). Bacterial endocarditis and chronic mastitis can cause fever and lameness with reluctance to walk but there are no head signs.
 
Single cases of bluetongue were first reported in the UK during August 2007. The most important differential diagnosis is foot and mouth disease, where the infection causes profuse salivation, erosions/ulcers in the mouth, lameness, and fever spread rapidly to affect all cattle on the premises within days. Other important differential diagnoses include IBR (group or herd) and malignant catarrhal fever (usually individual cattle). Bacterial endocarditis and chronic mastitis can cause fever and lameness with reluctance to walk but there are no head signs.
 
|l1=Bluetongue
 
|l1=Bluetongue
|q2=How action would you take?
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|q2=What action would you take?
 
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|a2=
 
Bluetongue is a notifiable disease in the UK and suspected cases must be reported immediately to the local Animal Health Office.
 
Bluetongue is a notifiable disease in the UK and suspected cases must be reported immediately to the local Animal Health Office.

Latest revision as of 15:35, 2 September 2011


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In mid-autumn a farmer reports a single beef cow which is febrile (40.0°C (104.0°F)) and appears stiff and very reluctant to move due to swelling of the coronary band at the top of the hooves. There is a serous to mucopurulent nasal discharge and there are erosions on the muzzle with sloughing of the mucosa. There is lacrimation but no obvious eye lesions.


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