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The effect of digital lesions and floor type on locomotion score in Dutch dairy cows
- Source :
- Preventive Veterinary Medicine 88 (2009) 2, Preventive Veterinary Medicine, 88(2), 150-157
- Publication Year :
- 2009
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2009.
-
Abstract
- This study describes the effects of floor system, digital dermatitis (DD) and interdigital dermatitis and heel-horn erosion (IDHE) on locomotion performance in 225 dairy cows of 12 commercial dairy herds. Nine herds were kept in cubicle houses with concrete passageways (either solid, slatted, or grooved concrete) and three herds were kept in straw yards. Animals were at most five times examined at monthly intervals for lesion severity of DD and IDHE and for locomotion score. Locomotion score was rated on a scale ranging from 1 to 5 (from normal to severe) and disturbed locomotion (lameness) was defined as a scoreor =3. A logistic regression model was used to analyze the 943 observations using lameness (yes/no) as outcome variable. The proportion of observations scored as lame (locomotion scoreor =3) increased from 18% 1 month after trimming to 29% at 4 months after trimming. Severe lesions of DD and IDHE were associated with a significantly higher proportion of lame cows. The proportion of animals with disturbed locomotion increased from 16% to 40% as the severity of DD increased and from 17% to 30% with increasing severity of IDHE lesions. Locomotion performance highly differed between the cubicle house and straw yard group. Only 1% of all gaits in straw yard cows were scored as lame, while in cubicle housed cows these percentages varied from 24% to 46% with grooved floors showing the highest average locomotion score. Due to the extreme low incidence of lameness in straw yards, the statistical analysis had to be restricted to observations on concrete floors (n=744). The logistic regression model with lameness (yes/no) as dependent variable and random effects of cow and herd resulted in Odds Ratios for severe DD and IDHE of, respectively, 3.2 and 3.2, both significantly larger than unity. Cows housed at grooved concrete floors showed the highest OR of 6.5 compared to solid concrete floors. Recovery of lameness was poor as disturbance in gait lasted several months.
- Subjects :
- Hoof and Claw
Veterinary medicine
Kwantitatieve Veterinaire Epidemiologie
Lameness, Animal
prevalence
Cattle Diseases
Dermatitis
Logistic regression
Foot Diseases
ATV Farm Technology
Food Animals
Floors and Floorcoverings
Human Animal Interaction
medicine
foot lesions
Animals
Statistical analysis
Longitudinal Studies
disorders
risk-factors
dermatitis
Netherlands
Dairy herds
business.industry
Incidence (epidemiology)
Digital dermatitis
Quantitative Veterinary Epidemiology
medicine.disease
Housing, Animal
Gait
cattle
Lameness
cubicles
WIAS
Herd
Regression Analysis
epidemiology
Cattle
Female
Animal Science and Zoology
business
clinical lameness
white line
Dier en maatschappij
Locomotion
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 01675877
- Volume :
- 88
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Preventive Veterinary Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a85a497470d9e7ebde0d75fd4a0e4251
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2008.08.004