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The Rural Voice, 2002-06, Page 40Mycoplasma has become a painful condition, both for cable,.) and cattle producers: Mycoplasma miseries When cattle ,get sick with mycoplasma, cattle producers feel the pain too Story by Bonnie Gropp Jf you feed cattle, you probably have encountered mycoplasma. Ken Bateman, of the Ontario Veterinary College, says that 30 years ago, the bacteria primarily caused arthritis in cattle, but in the past 10-15 year period it has been creeping in as pneumonia. "It's not as well recognized, but I'm sure we saw it well before 1995 here." Historically, he says, fed cattle prior to 1990 were often victims of shipping fever pneurhonia. Since then mycoplasma pneumonia and polyarthritis have begun to appear. "It is becoming increasingly important." While shipping fever leaves the lung feeling much like liver, a lung infected with mycoplasma looks like it has been hit by a shotgun blast. Calling it a debilitating, painful disease, Bateman said "the animals 36 THE RURAL VOICE don't have the decency to die, but linger awhile and make life miserable." While a few cases will just experience pneumonia about four- fifths will suffer as well from arthritis. This affects the joints and soft tissue as well as the tendons. Inside the lung there will be micro- abscesses and it will develop a "cheesy" texture. Some studies show that some lungs may have had a bit of both shipping fever and mycoplasma pneumonia, says Bateman. "If you've had this (in your cattle) you know it's a painful series of events." Because it is often difficult to diagnose, the afflicted animal will first be treated for respiratory disease, but will relapse in seven to 10 days. There may not be lameness at this point. The joints affected in the front leg are usually from the knee upward and from the hock upward in the rear leg. The animal will be treated again, and the joint will begin to swell. Sometimes more than one joint can be involved. "However, in some cases," says Bateman, "it can be a puzzlement as to why the animal can't stand or is lame because sometimes the joints don't show any swelling." The animal will be treated several times, and Bateman says the producer will often feel like he's wasting time and money. "It's extremely painful around the joint and pretty hard to get an antibiotic in there to do any good." At this point if the animal can be put in a convalescent pen, that provides extra shelter and better footing, there can be a success rate of up to 90 per cent, but more often around 50-60 per cent. The animal is susceptible to other diseases, and while they are long past the point when a farmer might want to give them antibiotics, they should be monitored to see if other pneumonias develop. "It can be a bit of an embarrassment from an animal welfare standpoint as it appears nothing is being done for the animal.