Mastitis in dairy cattle caused by corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis and the feasibility of transmission by houseflies I

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Abstract

Morbidity due to Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis infection occurred in 29 dairy herds. The disease appeared basically in three clinical forms: cutaneous, mastitic, and visceral. The appearance of the disease showed a marked seasonality: in 23 herds it occurred during the spring and summer months (dry season) (March-October). The mastitic form occurred in only 10 herds and the causative bacterium was isolated from 33 cows (5.8%). All the strains of C. pseudotuberculosis isolated from the milk samples were found not to be nitrate reducers. The bacterium was excreted in the milk of six cows from herd B during a period of 11 months. In the mastitic cows, a decrease in milk production and considerable increases in the somatic cell count were noted.C. pseudotuberculosis was isolated from houseflies collected over a cow lesion. Laboratory-reared houseflies were successfully infected with C. pseudotuberculosis-contaminated milk, broth and sugar cubes. Flies infected with the bacterium from contaminated milk excreted the bacterium in their droppings for up to 4 h and from their saliva for up to 3 h post infection. The bacterium survived on the external organs of houseflies for no longer than 10 min post infection, after the flies had been dipped in contaminated broth. © 1996 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Yeruham, I., Braverman, Y., Shpigel, N. Y., Chizov-Ginzburg, A., Saran, A., & Winkler, M. (1996). Mastitis in dairy cattle caused by corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis and the feasibility of transmission by houseflies I. Veterinary Quarterly, 18(3), 87–89. https://doi.org/10.1080/01652176.1996.9694623

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