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Choosing the optimal combination of lung lobe evaluation during focused pulmonary ultrasonography in calves

Authors :
G. Anteveli
J.P. Andrade
B. de Andrade Alves
J.P. Matiello
G.S. Lemos
C. Souza de Oliveira
D.L. da Cruz
R. Romero Nicolino
E.J. Facury Filho
R.M. Meneses
A.U. de Carvalho
S. Buczinski
T.F. Moreira
Source :
Journal of Dairy Science, Vol 108, Iss 1, Pp 750-759 (2025)
Publication Year :
2025
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2025.

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Bovine respiratory disease (BRD) poses significant challenges on beef and dairy farms, affecting mortality rates, animal welfare, and production efficiency. Although pulmonary ultrasonography is highly sensitive and specific for monitoring lung lesions and diagnosing BRD, its practical application could be optimized by focusing on the most commonly affected lung lobes. This study first evaluated the efficacy of focused lung ultrasonography for diagnosing BRD in calves, examining individual lung lobes and their associations versus the extensive lung scanning under various disease prevalence scenarios. Then, the relationship between individual and combined clinical respiratory signs versus lung consolidation was analyzed. In a combined analysis, 193 Holstein calves from a longitudinal study and 112 Angus calves from a cross-sectional study underwent a total of 1,265 complete bilateral thoracic ultrasonographic evaluations from 1 to 6 mo of age. Then, the agreement and sensitivity (Se) of specific lung lobe combinations compared with the findings from total lung ultrasonography was assessed. The classification and regression tree (CART) algorithm was used to suggest an optimal examination sequence, and logistic regression was applied to associate specific clinical signs with the presence of lung consolidation, adjusting for breed and calf age. Findings revealed that the most sensitive areas are the cranial (kappa value [κ] = 0.867; Se = 84.7%) and caudal portion of the right cranial lobe (κ = 0.433; Se = 40.3%), the caudal portion (κ = 0.235; Se = 20.6%) of the left cranial lobe, and the middle lobe (κ = 0.25; Se = 22%). The optimal lobe combinations for focused lung ultrasonography were identified as the right cranial lobe paired with either the left cranial lobe or the middle lobe. Focused techniques achieved Se greater than 94% and maintained good agreement. These focused techniques were relatively robust to various true lung consolidation scenarios. The CART analysis recommended initiating examinations with the right cranial lobe, proceeding to the left cranial lobe, and concluding with the middle lobe. Although spontaneous cough was linked to pneumonia presence, reliance on a single clinical sign is not advised due to low Se (26.8%) and high specificity (85.4%); it should merely prompt further ultrasound assessment. In conclusion, focused lung ultrasonography, especially utilizing the right cranial lobe in conjunction with the left cranial lobe or the middle lobe, emerged as an effective strategy for focused pulmonary ultrasonography, preserving the accuracy of the results.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00220302
Volume :
108
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Dairy Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.06006f976e7412b937ceff874ebde07
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2024-25186