A Highly Effective Protocol for the Rapid and Consistent Induction of Digital Dermatitis in Holstein Calves.

Bovine Digital Dermatitis (DD) is a leading cause of lameness in dairy cattle. DD is reportedly increasing in prevalence in beef cattle feedlots of the US. The exact etiologic agent(s) responsible for the disease have yet to be determined. Multiple studies have demonstrated the presence of a variety...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Adam C Krull, Vickie L Cooper, John W Coatney, Jan K Shearer, Patrick J Gorden, Paul J Plummer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4847800?pdf=render
id doaj-2c54cdde8e5a47c48b620c8ed26be582
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2c54cdde8e5a47c48b620c8ed26be5822020-11-25T02:13:02ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01114e015448110.1371/journal.pone.0154481A Highly Effective Protocol for the Rapid and Consistent Induction of Digital Dermatitis in Holstein Calves.Adam C KrullVickie L CooperJohn W CoatneyJan K ShearerPatrick J GordenPaul J PlummerBovine Digital Dermatitis (DD) is a leading cause of lameness in dairy cattle. DD is reportedly increasing in prevalence in beef cattle feedlots of the US. The exact etiologic agent(s) responsible for the disease have yet to be determined. Multiple studies have demonstrated the presence of a variety of Treponema spp. within lesions. Attempts to reproduce clinically relevant disease using pure cultures of these organisms has failed to result in lesions that mirror the morphology and severity of naturally occurring lesions. This manuscript details the systematic development of an experimental protocol that reliably induces digital dermatitis lesions on a large enough scale to allow experimental evaluation of treatment and prevention measures. In total, 21 protocols from five experiments were evaluated on their effectiveness in inducing DD lesions in 126 Holstein calves (504 feet). The protocols varied in the type and concentration of inoculum, frequency of inoculation, duration the feet were wrapped, and type of experimental controls need to validate a successful induction. Knowledge gained in the first four experiments resulted in a final protocol capable of inducing DD lesions in 42 of 44 (95%) feet over a 28 day period. All induced lesions were macroscopically and microscopically identified as clinical DD lesions by individuals blinded to protocols. Lesions were also located at the site of inoculation in the palmer aspect of the interdigital space, and induced clinically measurable lameness in a significant portion of the calves. Collectively these results validate the model and provide a rapid and reliable means of inducing DD in large groups of calves.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4847800?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adam C Krull
Vickie L Cooper
John W Coatney
Jan K Shearer
Patrick J Gorden
Paul J Plummer
spellingShingle Adam C Krull
Vickie L Cooper
John W Coatney
Jan K Shearer
Patrick J Gorden
Paul J Plummer
A Highly Effective Protocol for the Rapid and Consistent Induction of Digital Dermatitis in Holstein Calves.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Adam C Krull
Vickie L Cooper
John W Coatney
Jan K Shearer
Patrick J Gorden
Paul J Plummer
author_sort Adam C Krull
title A Highly Effective Protocol for the Rapid and Consistent Induction of Digital Dermatitis in Holstein Calves.
title_short A Highly Effective Protocol for the Rapid and Consistent Induction of Digital Dermatitis in Holstein Calves.
title_full A Highly Effective Protocol for the Rapid and Consistent Induction of Digital Dermatitis in Holstein Calves.
title_fullStr A Highly Effective Protocol for the Rapid and Consistent Induction of Digital Dermatitis in Holstein Calves.
title_full_unstemmed A Highly Effective Protocol for the Rapid and Consistent Induction of Digital Dermatitis in Holstein Calves.
title_sort highly effective protocol for the rapid and consistent induction of digital dermatitis in holstein calves.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Bovine Digital Dermatitis (DD) is a leading cause of lameness in dairy cattle. DD is reportedly increasing in prevalence in beef cattle feedlots of the US. The exact etiologic agent(s) responsible for the disease have yet to be determined. Multiple studies have demonstrated the presence of a variety of Treponema spp. within lesions. Attempts to reproduce clinically relevant disease using pure cultures of these organisms has failed to result in lesions that mirror the morphology and severity of naturally occurring lesions. This manuscript details the systematic development of an experimental protocol that reliably induces digital dermatitis lesions on a large enough scale to allow experimental evaluation of treatment and prevention measures. In total, 21 protocols from five experiments were evaluated on their effectiveness in inducing DD lesions in 126 Holstein calves (504 feet). The protocols varied in the type and concentration of inoculum, frequency of inoculation, duration the feet were wrapped, and type of experimental controls need to validate a successful induction. Knowledge gained in the first four experiments resulted in a final protocol capable of inducing DD lesions in 42 of 44 (95%) feet over a 28 day period. All induced lesions were macroscopically and microscopically identified as clinical DD lesions by individuals blinded to protocols. Lesions were also located at the site of inoculation in the palmer aspect of the interdigital space, and induced clinically measurable lameness in a significant portion of the calves. Collectively these results validate the model and provide a rapid and reliable means of inducing DD in large groups of calves.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4847800?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT adamckrull ahighlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT vickielcooper ahighlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT johnwcoatney ahighlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT jankshearer ahighlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT patrickjgorden ahighlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT pauljplummer ahighlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT adamckrull highlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT vickielcooper highlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT johnwcoatney highlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT jankshearer highlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT patrickjgorden highlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
AT pauljplummer highlyeffectiveprotocolfortherapidandconsistentinductionofdigitaldermatitisinholsteincalves
_version_ 1724906734020984832