20 results on '"Dewell RD"'
Search Results
2. The welfare of ill and injured feedlot cattle: a review of the literature and implications for managing feedlot hospital and chronic pens.
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Sundman ER, Dewell GA, Dewell RD, Johnson AK, Thomson DU, and Millman ST
- Abstract
By definition, ill and injured animals are on the negative valence of animal welfare. For beef cattle kept in feedlot settings, advances in cattle health management have resulted in a greater understanding and prevention of illness and injury. However, the management of cattle once they become ill and injured is an understudied area, and there are gaps in knowledge that could inform evidence-based decision-making and strengthen welfare for this population. The aim of this review is to provide a comprehensive overview of the acquired knowledge regarding ill and injured feedlot cattle welfare, focusing on existing knowledge gaps and implications for hospital and chronic pen management and welfare assurance. Ill and injured feedlot cattle consist of acutely impaired animals with short-term health conditions that resolve with treatment and chronically impaired animals with long-term health conditions that may be difficult to treat. A literature search identified 110 articles that mentioned welfare and ill and injured feedlot cattle, but the population of interest in most of these articles was healthy cattle, not ill and injured cattle. Articles about managing ill and injured cattle in specialized hospital ( n = 12) or chronic ( n = 2) pens were even more sparse. Results from this literature search will be used to outline the understanding of acutely and chronically ill and injured feedlot cattle, including common dispositions and welfare considerations, behavior during convalescence, and strategies for identifying and managing ill and injured cattle. Finally, by working through specific ailments common in commercial feedlot environments, we illustrate how the Five Domains Model can be used to explore feelings and experiences and subsequent welfare state of individual ill or injured feedlot cattle. Using this approach and our knowledge of current industry practices, we identify relevant animal-based outcomes and critical research questions to strengthen knowledge in this area. A better understanding of this overlooked topic will inform future research and the development of evidence-based guidelines to help producers care for this vulnerable population., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Sundman, Dewell, Dewell, Johnson, Thomson and Millman.)
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- 2024
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3. Secure Sheep and Wool Supply Plan for Continuity of Business.
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Bickett-Weddle DA, Dewell RD, and McIntosh CE
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- Agriculture, Animal Husbandry standards, Animals, Disease Outbreaks veterinary, Foot-and-Mouth Disease epidemiology, Sheep Diseases epidemiology, Textile Industry, United States epidemiology, Animal Husbandry methods, Foot-and-Mouth Disease prevention & control, Sheep growth & development, Sheep Diseases prevention & control, Wool growth & development
- Abstract
Sheep operations will be subject to movement controls during a US foot and mouth disease outbreak and should be prepared to manage animal and product movement disruptions. The voluntary Secure Sheep and Wool Supply (SSWS) Plan for Continuity of Business provides tools for the sheep industry to develop contingency plans, write enhanced, operation-specific biosecurity plans, and learn about disease surveillance opportunities and challenges. The SSWS Plan is science-based and risk-based, funded by the American Sheep Industry Association, and developed collaboratively with industry, government officials, and veterinarians at Iowa State University. For more information, visit www.securesheepwool.org., Competing Interests: Disclosure D.A. Bickett-Weddle: The author works for the Center for Food Security and Public Health (CFSPH) at Iowa State University, which received funding from the American Sheep Industry (ASI) Association to develop the Secure Sheep and Wool Supply (SSWS) Plan for Continuity of Business (COB), supporting documents, and Web site. The CFSPH also received funding from USDA APHIS for the maintenance of the Secure Beef and Milk Supply Plans, supporting documents, and Web site. R.D. Dewell: The author works for the CFSPH at Iowa State University, which received funding from the ASI Association to develop the SSWS Plan for COB, supporting documents, and Web site. The CFSPH also received funding from USDA APHIS for the maintenance of the Secure Beef and Milk Supply Plans, supporting documents, and Website. C.E. McIntosh: The author works for the CFSPH at Iowa State University, which received funding from the ASI Association to develop the SSWS Plan for COB, supporting documents, and Web site. The CFSPH also received funding from USDA APHIS for the maintenance of the Secure Beef and Milk Supply Plans, supporting documents, and Web site., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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4. Cattle Assessment On-Site During Emergencies.
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Jones AL, Dewell RD, and Davis J
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- Animal Husbandry methods, Animal Welfare, Animals, Disasters, Emergencies, Humans, Veterinarians, Cattle, Disaster Planning methods, Livestock, Veterinary Medicine methods
- Abstract
Veterinary assessment of the condition and needs of livestock and their owners in an emergency is an essential element of the disaster response. The emergency response for livestock has 4 critical components: assessing the need for and attending to the immediate medical needs of injured or affected livestock, determining the resources available to meet the needs, including feed and facilities, identifying any ongoing threats or potential hazards to livestock health and welfare, and appropriate documentation of damages and actions by responders. Information gathered from cattle assessments by veterinarians is used to prioritize resources and plan for anticipated needs., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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5. Validation of a portable pneumatic captive bolt device as a one-step method of euthanasia for use in depopulation of feedlot cattle.
- Author
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Derscheid RJ, Dewell RD, Dewell GA, Kleinhenz KE, Shearer LC, Gilliam JN, Reynolds JP, Sun Y, and Shearer JK
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- Animal Welfare standards, Animals, Brain Hemorrhage, Traumatic veterinary, Cattle, Equipment Design, Equipment and Supplies standards, Equipment and Supplies veterinary, Female, Housing, Animal, Male, Skull Fractures veterinary, Euthanasia, Animal methods
- Abstract
Objective: To validate the effectiveness of a penetrating captive bolt device with a built-in low-pressure air channel pithing mechanism (PCBD) as a 1-step method for euthanasia of cattle., Design: Clinical trial., Animals: 66 feedlot steers and heifers (weight, 227 to 500 kg [500 to 1,100 lb]) that were not expected to survive or finish the feeding period with their cohorts., Procedures: Cattle were transported to a university facility and euthanized with the PCBD. For each calf, clinical variables were monitored and recorded immediately before and for at least 10 minutes after application of the PCBD. Following euthanasia, the head of each calf was removed and trauma to the brain and skull was assessed and scored., Results: Death was successfully achieved with the PCBD without application of an ancillary technique in all 66 cattle; however, 4 (6%) cattle required a second or third shot from the PCBD because of technical errors in its placement. All shots from the PCBD that entered the cranial vault successfully rendered cattle unconscious without a return to sensibility., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Results indicated that the PCBD was an effective 1-step method of euthanasia for use in mass depopulation of feedlot cattle.
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- 2016
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6. Pain and sickness behavior associated with corneal lesions in dairy calves.
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Woods BJ, Millman ST, da Silva NA, Dewell RD, Parsons RL, Wang C, and O'Connor AM
- Abstract
Infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis (IBK) is a common corneal disease of calves that adversely affects animal welfare by causing pain and weight loss. Identifying behavioral indicators of pain and sickness in calves with IBK is necessary for designing studies that aim to identify effective means of pain mitigation. Consistent with principles of the 3Rs for animal use in research, data from a randomized blinded challenge study was used to identify and describe variation of behaviors that could serve as reliable indicators of pain and sickness in calves with corneal injuries. Behavioral observations were collected from 29 Holstein calves 8 to 12 weeks of age randomly allocated to one of three treatments: (1) corneal scarification only, (2) corneal scarification with inoculation with Moraxella bovoculi and (3) corneal scarification with inoculation with Moraxella bovis. Behavior was continuously observed between time 1230 - 1730 h on day -1 (baseline time period) and day 0 (scarification time period). Corneal scarification and inoculation occurred between 0800 - 1000 h on day 0. Frequency of head-directed behaviors (head shaking, head rubbing, head scratching) and durations of head rubbing, feeding, standing with head lifted, lying with head lifted and sleeping were compared between study days and groups. Following scarification, the frequency of head-directed behavior significantly increased (p = 0.0001), as did duration of head rubbing (p=0.02). There was no significant effect of trial, trial day, treatment or treatment-day interaction on other behaviors studied. Our study demonstrated that head-directed behavior, such as head shaking, rubbing and scratching, was associated with scarification of eyes using an IBK challenge model, but sickness behavior was not observed.
- Published
- 2015
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7. Schirmer tear test I and rebound tonometry findings in healthy calves.
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Tofflemire KL, Whitley EM, Gould SA, Dewell RD, Allbaugh RA, Ben-Shlomo G, O'Connor AM, and David Whitley R
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- Animals, Female, Male, Cattle physiology, Tears metabolism, Tonometry, Ocular veterinary
- Abstract
Objective: To describe Schirmer tear test I and rebound tonometry findings in healthy bovine calves., Animals Studied: Thirty-three clinically normal dairy breed calves of mean (SD) 11 (1.1) weeks (range, 9.3-13.3 weeks) of age were evaluated., Procedures: A Schirmer tear test I was performed on each eye followed by tonometry, using a TonoVet(®) without topical anesthesia. We report means (SD) and statistical analysis of data for each assay., Results: For both Schirmer tear test (STT) I and tonometry, significant differences were not found between fellow eyes (P = 0.1536 and P = 0.83, respectively). The mean (SD) STT I value of all eyes was 20.4 (5.0) mm/min (range, 9-34 mm/min) while the mean (SD) intraocular pressure (IOP) value of all eyes was 15.2 (5.2) mmHg (range, 7-25 mmHg)., Conclusions: This study reports normal data for the STT I and rebound tonometry in calves. This data may be useful in complete ophthalmic examinations of cattle, guiding diagnosis of glaucoma, uveitis, and keratoconjunctivitis sicca. However, results of these diagnostic modalities must be interpreted in light of clinical signs, given the wide range of normal values obtained in this study., (© 2014 American College of Veterinary Ophthalmologists.)
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- 2015
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8. Serum concentrations of haptoglobin and haptoglobin-matrix metalloproteinase 9 (Hp-MMP 9) complexes of bovine calves in a bacterial respiratory challenge model.
- Author
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Hanthorn CJ, Dewell GA, Dewell RD, Cooper VL, Wang C, Plummer PJ, and Lakritz J
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- Animals, Biomarkers blood, Cattle, Cattle Diseases diagnosis, Cattle Diseases microbiology, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay veterinary, Lung microbiology, Mannheimia haemolytica immunology, Pneumonia of Calves, Enzootic diagnosis, Pneumonia of Calves, Enzootic microbiology, Cattle Diseases blood, Haptoglobins analysis, Matrix Metalloproteinase 9 blood, Pneumonia of Calves, Enzootic blood
- Abstract
Background: Serum haptoglobin (Hp) and haptoglobin matrix metalloproteinase 9 complexes (Hp-MMP 9) have been identified as biomarkers with diagnostic potential in cattle with conditions resulting in an acute inflammatory response. The purpose of this study was to evaluate potential diagnostic applications of serum Hp and Hp-MMP 9 concentrations in calves with BRD and establish a timeline for their detection in calves experimentally challenged with Bibersteinia trehalosi and Mannheimia haemolytica. Thirty-five cross bred dairy calves were inoculated via tracheal catheterization with either a PCR confirmed leukotoxin negative B. trehalosi isolate, a PCR confirmed leukotoxin positive B. trehalosi isolate, a Mannheimia haemolytica isolate, a combination of leukotoxin negative B. trehalosi and M. haemolytica, or a negative control. Serum samples were collected throughout the study. Calves were euthanized and necropsy performed on day 10 post inoculation., Results: M. haemolytica inoculated calves had increased lung involvement. Serum Hp and Hp- MMP 9 concentrations were elevated compared to the other treatment groups. Increases in serum Hp and Hp-MMP 9 concentrations for the M. haemolytica group were significantly different from other study groups on day 7 of the study. B. trehalosi inoculated calves did not have increased lung involvement compared to control calves, but the leukotoxin positive B. trehalosi group demonstrated increased serum Hp-MMP 9 concentrations from day 3 to the end of the study compared to the pre-inoculation concentrations., Conclusion: Serum Hp-MMP 9 concentration is a useful diagnostic tool for detecting early pulmonary inflammation in calves challenged with B. trehalosi and M. haemolytica. Serum Hp-MMP 9 may also be a useful tool in detecting subclinical pulmonary inflammation in challenged calves.
- Published
- 2014
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9. Corneal sensitivity in healthy bovine calves.
- Author
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Tofflemire KL, Whitley EM, Dewell RD, Gould SA, Allbaugh RA, Ben-Shlomo G, O'Connor AM, and Whitley RD
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- Animals, Male, Cattle physiology, Cornea physiology, Touch physiology
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate corneal sensitivity as measured by the corneal touch threshold in healthy bovine calves., Animals Studied: Twelve clinically normal male calves with predominantly Holstein genetics and a median age of 76.5 days (range, 67-92 days)., Procedures: Corneal touch threshold (CTT) of the central cornea was measured in both eyes of each calf using a Cochet-Bonnet aesthesiometer., Results: The mean ± standard deviation corneal touch threshold of all eyes was 1.33 ± 1.1 g/mm(2) (range, 0.62-66.15 g/mm(2) ), corresponding to a filament length of 34.56 ± 8.02 mm (range, 14-47.5 mm). There was no significant difference between fellow eyes., Conclusions: Cochet-Bonnet aesthesiometry was well tolerated in all 12 calves using a modified head restraint. Calves in this study may have a relatively sensitive central cornea compared to adult cattle and some other species; however, wide variation among individuals and eyes may be possible. Studies utilizing larger calf populations are necessary to establish reference ranges., (© 2014 American College of Veterinary Ophthalmologists.)
- Published
- 2014
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10. Randomized clinical trial to evaluate the pathogenicity of Bibersteinia trehalosi in respiratory disease among calves.
- Author
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Hanthorn CJ, Dewell RD, Cooper VL, Frana TS, Plummer PJ, Wang C, and Dewell GA
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- Animals, Cattle, Coinfection, Pasteurellaceae classification, Pasteurellaceae Infections microbiology, Cattle Diseases microbiology, Mannheimia haemolytica, Pasteurellaceae pathogenicity, Pasteurellaceae Infections veterinary
- Abstract
Background: Bibersteinia trehalosi causes respiratory disease in ruminants particularly in wild and domestic sheep. Recently, there has been an increased number of B. trehalosi isolates obtained from diagnostic samples from bovine respiratory disease cases. This study evaluated the role of B. trehalosi in bovine respiratory disease using an intra-tracheal inoculation model in calves. Thirty six cross bred 2-3 month old dairy calves were inoculated intra-tracheally with either leukotoxin negative B. trehalosi, leukotoxin positive B. trehalosi isolate, Mannheimia haemolytica, a combination of leukotoxin negative B. trehalosi and M. haemolytica or negative control. Calves were euthanized and necropsy performed on day 10 of study., Results: B. trehalosi inoculated calves did not have increased lung involvement compared to control calves. Additionally, B. trehalosi was only cultured once from the lungs of inoculated calves at necropsy., Conclusions: Based on these findings B. trehalosi may not be a primary pathogen of respiratory disease in cattle. Culture of B. trehalosi from diagnostic submissions should not be immediately identified as a primary cause of respiratory disease.
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- 2014
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11. Evaluating approaches to measuring ocular pain in bovine calves with corneal scarification and infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis-associated corneal ulcerations.
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Dewell RD, Millman ST, Gould SA, Tofflemire KL, Whitley RD, Parsons RL, Rowe EW, Liu F, Wang C, and O'Connor AM
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- Animals, Cattle, Cattle Diseases microbiology, Cattle Diseases pathology, Corneal Ulcer complications, Corneal Ulcer pathology, Pain Measurement methods, Cattle Diseases etiology, Corneal Ulcer veterinary, Keratoconjunctivitis, Infectious complications, Pain veterinary, Pain Measurement veterinary
- Abstract
Infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis (IBK) is a common ocular disease in cattle, associated with a 6.8 to 13.6 kg decrease in weaning weight. Antibiotic therapy is available but it is unclear if pain mitigation as an adjunct therapy would reduce the weight loss associated with IBK. Before assessing the impact of pain mitigation therapies, it is first necessary to validate approaches to qualifying ocular pain. The objective of this study was to evaluate approaches to qualifying ocular pain in bovine calves (Bos taurus) with IBK. Our a priori assumption was that scarification or corneal ulcerations consistent with IBK are painful compared to normal eyes. To quantify this difference in pain, we assessed 4 tools: pressure algometry-mechanical nociceptive threshold (PA-MNT), corneal touch thresholds (CTT) obtained with the use of a Cochet-Bonnet aesthesiometer, and assessment for the presence of blepharospasm and photophobia as metrics for pain. Using a 1-eye randomized controlled challenge trial, 31 calves with healthy eyes were randomly allocated to treatment groups, and then a left or right eye was randomly assigned for corneal scarification and inoculation with Moraxella bovoculi or Moraxella bovis. A repeated measures analysis of variance was used for PA-MNT, with significance set at P < 0.05. A log (base 10) transformation was used to stabilize the variance, and Tukey's t tests were used to test differences between assessment days for each landmark. Calves had statistically significantly lower PA-MNT scores (which indicates more pain) the day after scarification relative to baseline measurements (4 d before scarification). For example, at 1 landmark the median PA-MNT (kg/force) prescarification was 4.82 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 3.92-5.93) and 3.43 (95% CI: 2.79-4.22) postscarification. These data suggest PA-MNT may be a tool for quantifying ocular pain in calves. No differences (P < 0.1) in PA-MNT scores between scarified and not-scarified eyes were detected for any landmark on any day. This result suggests that the pain response occurs over the entire face, not just the affected eye. Corneal ulcerations consistent with IBK were not associated with statistically significant differences in PA-MNT or CTT at eye or calf levels. Not surprisingly, scarified eyes were more likely to exhibit blepharospasm and photophobia compared to healthy eyes. Due to blepharospasm, the use of the Cochet-Bonnet to evaluate corneal sensitivity by CTT was of limited value.
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- 2014
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12. A survey of reasons why veterinarians enter rural veterinary practice in the United States.
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Villarroel A, McDonald SR, Walker WL, Kaiser L, Dewell RD, and Dewell GA
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Data Collection, Female, Humans, Male, Rural Population, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Career Choice, Veterinarians
- Abstract
Objective: To identify factors associated with interest in or choosing a career in rural veterinary practice (RVP)., Design: Cross-sectional descriptive study., Sample Population: Veterinarians and veterinary students in the United States., Procedures: Veterinary students and veterinarians in any area of practice were solicited to participate in an online survey through invitation letters sent to various veterinary associations. Proportions of respondents assigning high importance to various factors were analyzed for differences among gender, age, and background groups., Results: 1,216 responses were received. In general, survey respondents indicated that RVP could be characterized as the practice of veterinary medicine in any community where agriculture represented a significant part of the local economy. Responses also indicated that RVP should not be confused with large animal or food animal exclusive practice. Most respondents (38.9%) developed an interest in RVP early in life (before 8th grade), with 13.0% reportedly developing their interest in RVP during veterinary school. The most highly ranked factors with regard to influence on developing an interest in RVP were having relatives with a farm background, having a veterinarian in RVP as a mentor, and exposure to RVP during veterinary school. Gender, generational category, background (rural vs urban), and livestock experience were significantly associated with when respondents developed an interest in RVP and with factors important in developing that interest., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Results of the present study suggested that various factors are associated with interest in and choosing a career in RVP. These factors should be considered when strategies for increasing interest and encouraging careers in RVP are planned.
- Published
- 2010
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13. A survey of reasons why veterinarians leave rural veterinary practice in the United States.
- Author
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Villarroel A, McDonald SR, Walker WL, Kaiser L, Dewell RD, and Dewell GA
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Data Collection, Female, Humans, Male, Rural Population, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Career Choice, Veterinary Medicine
- Abstract
Objective: To identify factors associated with veterinarians leaving a career in rural veterinary practice (RVP)., Design: Cross-sectional descriptive study., Sample Population: Veterinarians from the United States who no longer worked in RVP., Procedures: Veterinarians in any area of practice were solicited to participate in an online survey through invitation letters sent to various veterinary associations. Those who indicated that they had left RVP were asked to rank the importance of various potential factors in their decision to leave RVP., Results: 805 responses were obtained from veterinarians who had worked in RVP, of which 246 (30.6%) had left RVP. Most (231/246 [93.9%]) of those who reported leaving RVP had been in practice > 5 years, and 75.2% (185/246) had been in practice > 12 years. Eighty-three (33.7%) who left RVP pursued careers in urban areas, 72 (29.3%) entered academia, and 7 (2.8%) retired. Reasons for leaving RVP ranked by the highest proportions of respondents as being of high importance were emergency duty, time off, salary, practice atmosphere, and family concerns. Women ranked factors such as time off, mentorship, practice atmosphere, conflict with staff, and gender issues as being of high importance more often than men did., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: Results suggested that the perceived shortage of veterinarians in RVP may be in part influenced by a lack of retention, particularly among experienced veterinarians. Targeted efforts to tackle issues related to emergency duty, time off, salary, practice atmosphere, and family issues could help alleviate the efflux from RVP.
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- 2010
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14. Risk associated with transportation and lairage on hide contamination with Salmonella enterica in finished beef cattle at slaughter.
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Dewell GA, Simpson CA, Dewell RD, Hyatt DR, Belk KE, Scanga JA, Morley PS, Grandin T, Smith GC, Dargatz DA, Wagner BA, and Salman MD
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- Animal Husbandry methods, Animals, Colony Count, Microbial, Feces microbiology, Food Contamination analysis, Food Contamination prevention & control, Food Microbiology, Hygiene, Odds Ratio, Regression Analysis, Risk Factors, Salmonella enterica growth & development, Abattoirs, Cattle microbiology, Risk Assessment, Salmonella enterica isolation & purification, Skin microbiology, Transportation
- Abstract
Transportation of cattle to the slaughter plant could influence hide contamination with Salmonella enterica. Fecal and hide samples were obtained from 40 lots of cattle at the feedlot and again at the slaughter plant. Potential risk factors for hide contamination were evaluated. A multilevel Poisson regression model was used to determine whether transportation and lairage were associated with hide contamination by Salmonella. Cattle with hide samples positive for Salmonella at the feedlot had twice the risk of having positive slaughter hide samples compared with cattle without positive feedlot hide samples (relative risk [RR], 1.9). Cattle transported in trailers from which samples positive for Salmonella were collected had twice the risk of having positive slaughter hide samples compared with cattle transported in culture-negative trailers (RR, 2.3). Cattle transported for long distances had twice the risk of having positive hide samples at slaughter compared with cattle transported shorter distances (RR, 2.3). Cattle held in lairage pens contaminated with feces had twice the risk of having positive slaughter hide samples compared with cattle held in clean pens (RR, 1.8). Cattle held off feed longer than 18 h before loading had twice the risk of having positive slaughter hide samples compared with cattle held off feed for shorter times (RR, 1.7). Cattle that were agitated during loading had twice the risk of having positive slaughter hide samples compared with cattle that were calm (RR, 2.2). These findings suggest that variables associated with transportation and lairage can impact the presence of Salmonella on the hides of cattle at slaughter.
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- 2008
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15. Impact of transportation and lairage on hide contamination with Escherichia coli O157 in finished beef cattle.
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Dewell GA, Simpson CA, Dewell RD, Hyatt DR, Belk KE, Scanga JA, Morley PS, Grandin T, Smith GC, Dargatz DA, Wagner BA, and Salman MD
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- Animal Husbandry methods, Animals, Feces microbiology, Food Contamination prevention & control, Food Microbiology, Hygiene, Odds Ratio, Regression Analysis, Risk Factors, Abattoirs standards, Cattle microbiology, Escherichia coli O157 isolation & purification, Food Contamination analysis, Skin microbiology, Transportation
- Abstract
Transportation of cattle from the feedlot to the slaughter plant could influence hide contamination of Escherichia coli O157. A study was initiated to investigate the influence of transportation and lairage on shedding and hide contamination of E. coli O157. Fecal and hide samples were obtained from 40 pens of harvest-ready beef cattle at the feedlot prior to transport and again at the slaughter plant immediately after slaughter. Potential risk factors for hide contamination at the feedlot, during transport, and at slaughter were evaluated. A multilevel Poisson regression model was used to evaluate if transportation and lairage were associated with hide contamination by E. coli O157 in finished beef cattle. Lots of cattle held in E. coli O157-positive lairage pens had eight times greater risk of having positive slaughter hide samples compared with cattle held in culture-negative pens (relative risk, 8.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.6 to 38.8). Lots of cattle that were held in lairage pens contaminated with feces had three times greater risk for positive slaughter hide samples compared with cattle held in clean pens (relative risk, 3.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.2 to 7.9). Lots of cattle that were transported for long distances (> 160.9 km) had twice the risk of having positive hide samples at slaughter compared with cattle transported a shorter distance (relative risk, 2.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.1 to 5.1). These findings suggest that transportation and lairage should be considered in E. coli O157 control strategies.
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- 2008
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16. Estimated compliance for removal of specified risk materials from 18 U.S. beef packing plants.
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Dewell RD, Hoffman TW, Woerner DR, Belk KE, Whalen LR, Fails AD, Scanga JA, Smith GC, and Salman MD
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- Animals, Cattle, Consumer Product Safety, Food Microbiology, Food Packaging methods, Food-Processing Industry methods, Humans, Meat standards, Proportional Hazards Models, United States, Food Contamination prevention & control, Food Inspection standards, Food Packaging standards, Food-Processing Industry standards, Meat analysis
- Abstract
The removal of 18,345 specified risk materials was observed during audits of 18 U.S. beef processing facilities that, in total, account for over 90% of total U.S. beef slaughtered. Audited plants varied in capacity (280 to 6,000 head per day) and processed both "fed (young cattle)" and "nonfed (mature cows/bulls)" cattle. When all observations for removal of specified risk materials were combined from plants and adjusted for type of cattle processed, overall compliance with specified risk material removal regulations was 98.08%. A 100% compliance rate for removal of brains and distal ileums was recorded based on a total of 600 observations for removal of brains and a total of 2,400 observations for removal of distal ileums. Observations for removal of dorsal root ganglia were collected from 16 of the 18 plants, and overall compliance for dorsal root ganglia removal was 99.6% (4,783 of 4,800). Fifteen of the 16 plants were 100% compliant. For tonsils, data from 18 plants were collected, and tonsils were correctly removed from 92.8% (4,777 of 5,145) of tongues and heads. Data for spinal cord removal were collected from 18 plants, and the spinal cord was removed completely in line with U.S. Department of Agriculture-Food Safety and Inspection Service regulations for 99.43% of the observations. Based on the results of this study, packing plants have demonstrated that they are complying with regulations for removal of specified risk materials from beef meat products intended for human consumption greater than 98% of the time. To continue to assure food safety and consumer confidence, continued vigilance and provision of training programs for plant workers are essential.
- Published
- 2008
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17. Association of neonatal serum immunoglobulin G1 concentration with health and performance in beef calves.
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Dewell RD, Hungerford LL, Keen JE, Laegreid WW, Griffin DD, Rupp GP, and Grotelueschen DM
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- Aging blood, Aging immunology, Animals, Cohort Studies, Female, Likelihood Functions, Logistic Models, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Predictive Value of Tests, Weaning, Weight Gain, Animals, Newborn blood, Animals, Newborn immunology, Cattle blood, Cattle growth & development, Cattle immunology, Health Status, Immunoglobulin G blood
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate associations between neonatal serum IgG1 concentration and pre- and postweaning morbidity and mortality rates and average daily gains (ADGs) in beef calves and define a cutoff point for serum IgG1 concentration necessary for optimal health and performance of beef calves., Design: Nonconcurrent cohort study., Animals: 1,568 crossbred beef calves., Procedure: Single radial immunodiffusion was used to quantitate IgG1 concentration in sera collected from calves between 24 and 72 hours after birth. Logistic regression, ANCOVA, and likelihood ratios were used to analyze data., Results: In the preweaning period, lower perinatal IgG1 concentrations were significantly associated with higher morbidity rates, higher mortality rates, and lower ADGs. Calves with serum IgG1 concentration < 2,400 mg/dL were 1.6 times as likely to become ill before weaning and 2.7 times as likely to die before weaning as calves with higher serum IgG1 concentrations. Calves with serum IgG1 concentration of at least 2,700 mg/dL weighed an estimated 3.35 kg (7.38 lb) more at 205 days of age than calves with lower serum IgG1 concentration. No significant association of serum IgG1 concentration with feedlot morbidity, death, or ADG was identified., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: By use of likelihood ratios, the threshold of serum IgG1 concentration for optimal health and performance of calves was higher than values reported previously. Implementation and maintenance of management and intervention strategies designed for early detection and treatment of calves at risk for failure of passive transfer will likely result in increases in preweaning health and performance parameters.
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- 2006
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18. Assessment and modification of a Western blot assay for detection of central nervous system tissue in meat products in the United States.
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Salman MD, Jemmi T, Triantis J, and Dewell RD
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- Animals, Blotting, Western standards, Cattle, Chickens, Consumer Product Safety, Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform prevention & control, Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform transmission, Food Handling, Nerve Tissue, Sensitivity and Specificity, Swine, Turkeys, United States, Blotting, Western methods, Food Contamination analysis, Food Safety, Meat Products analysis
- Abstract
Health hazards associated with meat contaminated by the bovine spongiform encephalopathy agent have led to the development of tests for the presence of this agent. The objective of this study was to optimize a neuron-specific enolase Western blot assay for use in the United States. We compared the original test with a modified protocol to evaluate the detection limit for the presence of central nervous system (CNS) tissue in experimentally inoculated samples and compared and evaluated the utility of these tests for detecting CNS tissue in retail sausages. Sensitivity and specificity of the original and modified protocols were evaluated using the kappa statistic to assess agreement between the results of the two protocols. The original protocol resulted in 100% specificity and 92% sensitivity for raw samples and 92% specificity and 72% sensitivity for cooked samples. The modified protocol resulted in 92% specificity and 89% sensitivity for raw samples and 83% specificity and 75% sensitivity for cooked samples. The kappa statistic for protocol comparison was 0.94 for raw samples and 0.74 for cooked samples. Both protocols correctly identified CNS tissue in positive controls for each replicate. Although the Western blot technique should be considered for screening for the presence of bovine CNS tissue in meat samples, the techniques should be further optimized to address problems of low sensitivity. A test with higher sensitivity is needed to protect consumers from food safety threats associated with bovine CNS tissue.
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- 2005
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19. Prevalence of and risk factors for Escherichia coli O157 in market-ready beef cattle from 12 U.S. feedlots.
- Author
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Dewell GA, Ransom JR, Dewell RD, McCurdy K, Gardner IA, Hill AE, Sofos JN, Belk KE, Smith GC, and Salman MD
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Cattle Diseases microbiology, Cattle Diseases transmission, Colony Count, Microbial, Colorado epidemiology, Escherichia coli Infections epidemiology, Escherichia coli Infections microbiology, Escherichia coli Infections transmission, Feces microbiology, Food Contamination prevention & control, Food Microbiology, Logistic Models, Meat microbiology, Montana epidemiology, Multivariate Analysis, Nebraska epidemiology, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Animal Feed microbiology, Animal Feed standards, Cattle Diseases epidemiology, Escherichia coli Infections veterinary, Escherichia coli O157 isolation & purification, Food Contamination analysis
- Abstract
Determination of Escherichia coli O157 prevalence immediately prior to shipment and harvest is an important facet of the ecology of this organism, which requires further elucidation. As part of a larger study to measure the effects of within-pen prevalence of E. coli O157 on subsequent carcass contamination, fecal samples from 15 pens of cattle in each of 12 different feedlots in three states (Colorado, Nebraska, and Montana) were collected from June through September 2002. Thirty fresh fecal samples were collected from each pen floor within 36 h of shipment to slaughter. Fecal samples underwent standard enrichment, immunomagnetic separation, and isolation procedures for E. coli O157. Multivariable logistic regression was used to determine which factors best predicted pen-level positive culture results, and to estimate the magnitude of association between each factor and the outcome, while adjusting for other factors in the model. Thirteen (86.7%) of the 15 pens had at least one positive sample, and the within-pen prevalence of E. coli O157 in positive pens ranged from 3.3% to 77.8%. The odds of E. coli O157 positive fecal samples from cattle fed brewers grains were six times that for cattle not fed brewers grains. The odds of E. coli O157 positive fecal samples from pens of cattle from Central Nebraska was nine times that for pens of cattle from Eastern Colorado. These data demonstrate that the presence of E. coli O157 in fecal samples from finished feedlot cattle is associated with feeding of brewers grain and geographic location. Additional studies to further characterize geographic distribution of E. coli O157 and to investigate pen-level intervention strategies should be conducted.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Immunologic responses to West Nile virus in vaccinated and clinically affected horses.
- Author
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Davidson AH, Traub-Dargatz JL, Rodeheaver RM, Ostlund EN, Pedersen DD, Moorhead RG, Stricklin JB, Dewell RD, Roach SD, Long RE, Albers SJ, Callan RJ, and Salman MD
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibodies, Viral blood, Cross-Sectional Studies, Culicidae virology, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay veterinary, Female, Horse Diseases blood, Horse Diseases prevention & control, Male, Mosquito Control, Neutralization Tests veterinary, Viral Plaque Assay veterinary, Viral Vaccines administration & dosage, West Nile Fever blood, West Nile Fever immunology, West Nile Fever prevention & control, Antibodies, Viral biosynthesis, Horse Diseases immunology, Horses immunology, Viral Vaccines immunology, West Nile Fever veterinary, West Nile virus immunology
- Abstract
Objective: To compare neutralizing antibody response between horses vaccinated against West Nile virus (WNV) and horses that survived naturally occurring infection., Design: Cross-sectional observational study., Animals: 187 horses vaccinated with a killed WNV vaccine and 37 horses with confirmed clinical WNV infection., Procedure: Serum was collected from vaccinated horses prior to and 4 to 6 weeks after completion of an initial vaccination series (2 doses) and 5 to 7 months later. Serum was collected from affected horses 4 to 6 weeks after laboratory diagnosis of infection and 5 to 7 months after the first sample was obtained. The IgM capture ELISA, plaque reduction neutralization test (PRNT), and microtiter virus neutralization test were used., Results: All affected horses had PRNT titers > or = 1:100 at 4 to 6 weeks after onset of disease, and 90% (18/20) maintained this titer for 5 to 7 months. After the second vaccination, 67% of vaccinated horses had PRNT titers > or = 1:100 and 14% had titers < 1:10. Five to 7 months later, 33% (28/84) of vaccinated horses had PRNT titers > or = 1:100, whereas 29% (24/84) had titers < 1:10. Vaccinated and clinically affected horses' end point titers had decreased by 5 to 7 months after vaccination., Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: A portion of horses vaccinated against WNV may respond poorly. Vaccination every 6 months may be indicated in certain horses and in areas of high vector activity. Other preventative methods such as mosquito control are warranted to prevent WNV infection in horses.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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