Herd-level risk factors for hock injuries in freestall-housed dairy cows in the northeastern united states and california

41Citations
Citations of this article
100Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate the associations between management and facility design factors and the prevalence of hock injuries in high-producing dairy cows in 76 freestall herds in the northeastern United States (NE-US; Vermont, New York, Pennsylvania) and California (CA). One group of high-production multiparous cows was monitored on each farm, and data on management, facility and stall design, and the conditions of the hocks were collected. Focal cows [n. =. 38. ±. 3 (mean ± standard deviation)] were evaluated for hock injuries using a 3-point scale (where 1. =. healthy and 3. =. evidently swollen or severe injury). Measures associated with the proportion (logit-transformed) of cows having injuries (score ≥2) or severe injuries (score. =. 3) at the univariable level were submitted to multivariable general linear models. In NE-US, overall hock injuries increased with the percentage of stalls with fecal contamination [odds ratio (OR). =. 1.26; 95% confidence interval (CI). =. 1.02-1.54, for a 10% increase], and with the use of sawdust as bedding (OR. =. 3.47; CI. =. 1.14-10.62), and decreased with deep bedding (i.e., at least 10. cm depth of any type of bedding; OR. =. 0.05; CI. =. 0.02-0.14), use of sand as bedding (OR. =. 0.06; CI. =. 0.02-0.15), bedding dry matter (DM) ≥83.9% (OR. =. 0.08; CI. =. 0.03-0.20), and access to pasture during the dry period (OR. =. 0.17; CI. =. 0.05-0.53). When these variables were submitted to a multivariable model, the presence of deep bedding was the only factor that remained significant, explaining 54% of the variation in overall injuries. Severe hock injuries increased with the use of automatic scrapers (OR. =. 2.29; CI. =. 1.11-4.71) and the percentage of stalls with fecal contamination (OR. =. 1.14; CI. =. 1.00-1.31, for a 10% increase), and decreased with sand bedding (OR. =. 0.22; CI. =. 0.10-0.49), deep bedding (OR. =. 0.24; CI. =. 0.11-0.52), bedding DM ≥83.9% (OR. =. 0.28; CI. =. 0.14-0.58), and access to pasture during the dry period (OR. =. 0.42; CI. =. 0.18-0.97). The final multivariable model, which explained 36% of the variation in severe hock injuries, included the use of automatic scrapers and deep bedding. In CA, stall stocking density (OR. =. 1.41; CI. =. 1.00-2.01, for a 10% increase) and poor bedding maintenance (OR. =. 1.08; CI. =. 1.01-1.16, for a 2.5-cm decrease in depth of deep-bedded stalls) were associated with an increase of overall and severe hock injuries, respectively. Deep-bedded and well-maintained stalls reduce the risk of hock injuries. Regional variation in risk factors for these injuries should be considered when formulating on-farm recommendations. © 2013 American Dairy Science Association.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Barrientos, A. K., Chapinal, N., Weary, D. M., Galo, E., & Von Keyserlingk, M. A. G. (2013). Herd-level risk factors for hock injuries in freestall-housed dairy cows in the northeastern united states and california. Journal of Dairy Science, 96(6), 3758–3765. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2012-6389

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free