1. [Rupture of the ventral serrate muscles (Flying Scapulas) as a symptom of muscular dystrophy in Holstein-Friesian heifers on a Dutch dairy farm].
- Author
-
Jobse KW, Bouwstra RJ, and Holzhauer M
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Chemical Analysis veterinary, Cattle, Cattle Diseases blood, Cattle Diseases drug therapy, Female, Muscular Dystrophy, Animal blood, Muscular Dystrophy, Animal drug therapy, Rupture, Spontaneous veterinary, Selenium therapeutic use, Treatment Outcome, Vitamin E therapeutic use, Vitamin E Deficiency blood, Vitamin E Deficiency complications, Cattle Diseases diagnosis, Muscle, Skeletal injuries, Muscular Dystrophy, Animal diagnosis, Selenium deficiency, Vitamin E Deficiency veterinary
- Abstract
Within a week of being turned out to pasture, 3 of 30 heifers displayed a symptom described in the literature as "Flying Scapulas". The cause of this symptom is severe muscular dystrophy, with subsequent rupture of the ventral serrate muscles. Blood analysis revealed a deficiency of both vitamin E and selenium in all three heifers. No new clinical cases of muscular dystrophy were observed after the animals were housed and given vitamin E and selenium supplements. As far as is known, this is the first report in which a deficiency of both vitamin E and selenium was found in animals with the clinical symptoms of Flying Scapulas. This is the first description of Flying Scapulas in cattle in The Netherlands.
- Published
- 2008