Effectiveness of on-farm screening tests for detection of antibiotic residues and control of mastitis through antibiotic therapy based on somatic cell counts

The effectiveness of on-farm tests for the detection of antibiotic residues in milk and urine was examined using the Virginia Tech dairy herd. Milk samples from treated cows were collected 72 hours post treatment and tested for residues by the Bacillus stearothermophilus Difco disc assay, the Delvot...

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Main Author: Hartling, Erin Elizabeth
Other Authors: Dairy Science
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/94462
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-944622021-04-11T05:46:28Z Effectiveness of on-farm screening tests for detection of antibiotic residues and control of mastitis through antibiotic therapy based on somatic cell counts Hartling, Erin Elizabeth Dairy Science LD5655.V855 1986.H378 Mastitis Milk -- Testing Somatic cells The effectiveness of on-farm tests for the detection of antibiotic residues in milk and urine was examined using the Virginia Tech dairy herd. Milk samples from treated cows were collected 72 hours post treatment and tested for residues by the Bacillus stearothermophilus Difco disc assay, the Delvotest-P, and the Penzyme test. Urine of cull cows was collected and tested with the Live Animal Swap Test (LAST). Results showed 21% to 24% of milk samples contained antibiotic residues past the recommended withholding period. In a comparison of the two on-farm tests to the officially recognized B. stearothermophilus disc assay, no significant difference was seen between the tests. An inordinately high (62.5%) level of urine samples from cull cows exhibited antibiotic combination with the LAST, although all animals had completed the recommended withholding period specified for each antibiotic. In the second phase of this study, cows in the Virginia Tech dairy herd were assigned to experimental or control groups. Milk from cows in either group whose linear somatic cell count score (SCC) ≥ 5 for the first time during that lactation was culture on blood agar plates to detect mastitis pathogens, and the SCC was determined. Experimental group cows were treated in those quarters with a SCC ≥ 5 while control cows had antibiotic therapy administered based only on clinical symptoms. Treatment group had no significant effect on milk production or SCC, however treatment of elevated SCC quarters did result in trends for decreased SCC and reduced milk yield loss. Treatment group significantly altered infection status of the cow. Of the quarters cured of infection, a greater percentage (63%) belonged to the experimental group. Results from this study indicate that the practice of administering antibiotic treatment based on elevated SCC should not be adopted until further studies on herds of higher infection rates are conducted. M.S. 2019-10-10T19:11:45Z 2019-10-10T19:11:45Z 1986 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/94462 en_US OCLC# 16653422 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ x, 106 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1986.H378
Mastitis
Milk -- Testing
Somatic cells
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1986.H378
Mastitis
Milk -- Testing
Somatic cells
Hartling, Erin Elizabeth
Effectiveness of on-farm screening tests for detection of antibiotic residues and control of mastitis through antibiotic therapy based on somatic cell counts
description The effectiveness of on-farm tests for the detection of antibiotic residues in milk and urine was examined using the Virginia Tech dairy herd. Milk samples from treated cows were collected 72 hours post treatment and tested for residues by the Bacillus stearothermophilus Difco disc assay, the Delvotest-P, and the Penzyme test. Urine of cull cows was collected and tested with the Live Animal Swap Test (LAST). Results showed 21% to 24% of milk samples contained antibiotic residues past the recommended withholding period. In a comparison of the two on-farm tests to the officially recognized B. stearothermophilus disc assay, no significant difference was seen between the tests. An inordinately high (62.5%) level of urine samples from cull cows exhibited antibiotic combination with the LAST, although all animals had completed the recommended withholding period specified for each antibiotic. In the second phase of this study, cows in the Virginia Tech dairy herd were assigned to experimental or control groups. Milk from cows in either group whose linear somatic cell count score (SCC) ≥ 5 for the first time during that lactation was culture on blood agar plates to detect mastitis pathogens, and the SCC was determined. Experimental group cows were treated in those quarters with a SCC ≥ 5 while control cows had antibiotic therapy administered based only on clinical symptoms. Treatment group had no significant effect on milk production or SCC, however treatment of elevated SCC quarters did result in trends for decreased SCC and reduced milk yield loss. Treatment group significantly altered infection status of the cow. Of the quarters cured of infection, a greater percentage (63%) belonged to the experimental group. Results from this study indicate that the practice of administering antibiotic treatment based on elevated SCC should not be adopted until further studies on herds of higher infection rates are conducted. === M.S.
author2 Dairy Science
author_facet Dairy Science
Hartling, Erin Elizabeth
author Hartling, Erin Elizabeth
author_sort Hartling, Erin Elizabeth
title Effectiveness of on-farm screening tests for detection of antibiotic residues and control of mastitis through antibiotic therapy based on somatic cell counts
title_short Effectiveness of on-farm screening tests for detection of antibiotic residues and control of mastitis through antibiotic therapy based on somatic cell counts
title_full Effectiveness of on-farm screening tests for detection of antibiotic residues and control of mastitis through antibiotic therapy based on somatic cell counts
title_fullStr Effectiveness of on-farm screening tests for detection of antibiotic residues and control of mastitis through antibiotic therapy based on somatic cell counts
title_full_unstemmed Effectiveness of on-farm screening tests for detection of antibiotic residues and control of mastitis through antibiotic therapy based on somatic cell counts
title_sort effectiveness of on-farm screening tests for detection of antibiotic residues and control of mastitis through antibiotic therapy based on somatic cell counts
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/94462
work_keys_str_mv AT hartlingerinelizabeth effectivenessofonfarmscreeningtestsfordetectionofantibioticresiduesandcontrolofmastitisthroughantibiotictherapybasedonsomaticcellcounts
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