Contagious Footrot

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Caused by Dichelobacter nodosus.

    • Contagious, economically important disease
    • Wet pasture and hydrated stratum corneum leads to colonisation by Gram positive cocci and Arcanobacter pyogenes, followed by F. necrophorum; addition of D. nodosus causes footrot
    • Can lead to loss of hoof
    • Usually caused by Bacteroides nodosus together with Fusobacterium necrophorum
    • Moisture and trauma allow B. nodosus to enter -> aids bacterial penetration of epidermis -> F. necrophorum invades -> necrosis and inflammation
    • Grossly:
      • Early lesions - red, moist, swollen, eroded interdigital skin
      • Spreads to epidermal matrix of hoof -> separation of horn + malodorous exudate
      • Regeneration attempted as germinal epithelium is not destroyed
      • Chronic infections -> long , misshapen hoof
    • Benign footrot (scald)- only interdigital ski affected, slight separation of heel horn
      • Mostly the type occuring in cattle