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The Rural Voice, 2003-01, Page 38Advice Many calves get mycoplasma before they're born �lanv ot the problems cattle producers have with animals infected with mycoplasma come from animals infected before. they are born. Rob Tremblay. a veterinarian with the drug company Boehringer - Ingelheim (Canada) Ltd. told the Beef Symposium 2002 in Brussels. November 28 that there's nothing a feedlot operator can do with these animals except to protect other animals from the mycoplasma they shed. The sick animals are infected by their mothers in the womb before their immune systems develop, he said. creating what is termed persistently infected (P1) calves which no medication can cure. The animals will keep sliding no matter what. and though one cow managed to live 12 years. providing infected offspring to infect other herds. the majority of cattle die by 18 months. But vaccinating all cattle arriving at a feedlot for BVD may actually help because it may cause some of the PI calves to die earlier. meaning at least they didn't add to their feed costs. Tremblay said. Mycoplasma is also often a tactor in deaths of cattle in feedlots that are diagnosed with other diseases, Tremblay said. It seems like mycoplasma plays a role in the deaths of cattle from chronic pneumonia. polyarthritis syndrome (CPPS) with 44 per cent of deaths from CPPS in one test group being found.to have been infected by mycoplasma. It seems mycoplasma plays a role but nobody knows for sure, Tremblay said. There is unlikely to be a vaccination developed for mycoplasma. he said. For one thing, mycoplasma knows how to avoid the calf's immune system. It has probably been around a long time and has discovered how to adapt. Researchers feel they'd need a vaccine that dealt with at least three strains of mycoplasma to be effective and one of those strains would need to be changed every two or three years or the vaccine would be worthless. "I don't think vaccination is going to solve the mycoplasma problem." Tremblay said. "We don't even know what bug we're dealing with. The Ontario virus is different than the European strain but it's unknown if it is different than the western Canadian or U.S. strain. "We don't know enough about mycoplasma bovis to, know how many bugs we have. There may be subtle differences we don't know." A way for feedlot owners to protect themselves from PI calves might be to get more information about their mothers. Tremblay said. "I'd be asking how the cows from which the calves came were vaccinated (for BVD)," he said. The last time someone did a count only about 30 per cent of the cow herd was vaccinated, he said. "If people don't start asking for vaccination we're not going to get it." Dennis Martin, OMAF feedlot specialist later emphasized that the way to get the best "bang for the buck" is to vaccinate all cows with a live -virus BVD shot before they get pregnant, thereby protecting the calf.0 Calf vaccination programs predict feedlot health By Ann Godkin importance ot the timing ot Vet. Science, OMAF vaccination to convince producers Over the last 10 years. that the extra effort of vaccinating at experiences with Bovine Viral the right time is really worthwhile. Diarrhea (BVD) have left cattle American researchers assessed the producers and veterinarians in this impact of differences in vaccination pro\ ince wiser about critical programs in 24 cow -calf herds on the elements of successful vaccination health of the calves after entry to a urograms. Vaccination works. but feedlot. All calves were processed ou have to do it right. identically after arrival. All received Vaccinating beef calves against one shot of modified live virus important diseases they will face in (MLV) vaccine for IBR, BVD, PI3 the feedlot is a battle between and BRSV on arrival. Just prior to effecu\eness and convenience. Often vaccination, blood was collected for �e most convenient time for the antibody detection. -roducer to \acctnate does not result There were a great variety of 1 the degree of protection needed to vaccination programs used in the 24 tep the call healthy under stress. herds. Ten herds used killed As 1)r Carl Ribble of the Ontario vaccines, nine used MIN and five -'eterrnary College has said, "when used a combination of MLV and .acetnt works. nothing happens killed. Of the 417 calves, 114 (27 per because nobody gets sick.' Producers cent) were treated and four (.96 per therefore are ternpted to slip back to a cent) died. Two were salvaged. more "convenient' vaccination Antibody levels on arrival program. it behooves us as vets and predicted susceptibility to illness educators to continually evaluate afterwards. f'or (RVI), the three herds research or cases that prove the whose calves had the least illness had 34 THE RURAL VOICE high BVD titres on entry (means were 192, 406 and 50) while the three herds with the most illness had low titres on entry (means were 0, 5 and 2). Among individual calves, BVD titres not only predicted whether they got sick but also the number of treatments they underwent. Calves not treated at all had a mean titre of 78.5; those treated once had a titre of 74.2; while those treated twice or more had a mean titre of 22.4. Those needing multiple treatments had significantly lower titres at entry from those not treated or treated,a single time. Treatment predicted. calf value. Compared to calves never treated, those treated once were worth $40.64 less; those treated twice, $58.35 Tess; and the multiply treated calves itlui ti((l $291.9)3 less. I h !hive herds whose calves had the Hue,' illness used killed virus vac, Ines but did not give the second Continued on page 35