Conventional and extended intramammary therapy of persistent subclinical mastitis using nafcillin-penicillindihydrostreptomycin in lactating dairy cattle

Document Type : Full paper (Original article)

Authors

1 Department of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran

2 Department of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Mashhad, Iran

Abstract

The objective of the present study was to compare the efficacy of conventional and extended
intramammary (IMM) therapy of persistent subclinical mastitis in lactating dairy cattle using nafcillinpenicillin-
dihydrostreptomycin combination (NPD). Sixty-five dairy cows with 126 infected quarters were enrolled in the study. Infected cows were allocated randomly to 1 of 3 different treatment regimens: (1) conventional group: NPD administered IMM 3 times at 24-h intervals (20 infected cows, 43 intramammary
infections [IMI]), (2) extended group: NPD administered IMM 6 times at 24-h intervals (23 cows, 43 IMI),
and (3) untreated control group (22 cows, 40 IMI). The overall bacteriological cure (BC) rates for subclinical
IMI were 86.04%, 100%, and 20% for the conventional, extended and the control groups, respectively;
indicating a higher BC rate (P<0.0001) for the treated groups than the control group. Significant difference
(P=0.029) concerning the BC rate was also observed between the extended and the conventional groups.
Significant difference (P=0.0021) in somatic cell count (SCC) was detected between the extended and the
control group. Fat percentage increased in the conventional (P=0.029) and in the extended (P<0.0001)
groups, and protein percentage increased only in the extended group (P=0.0016). There was no significant
difference in posttreatment milk production between the groups (P>0.05). Results of this study indicate that
NPD therapy was effective in eliminating subclinical IMI in lactating dairy cows, and that extended therapy
enhanced BC rate and reduced SCC.

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