SOME VIRAL AND BACTERIAL RESPIRATORY TRACT INFECTIONS OF DAIRY CATTLE DURING THE SUMMER SEASON
2013
In this research, dairy cattle with respiratory system problems that were
brought to a private slaughterhouse in Burdur province were investigated for
viral and bacterial infections present in the summer season. The blood
samples were collected from 56 animals. The samples were tested for
antibodies against bovine herpesvirus 1 (BoHV-1), bovine viral diarrhea virus
(BVDV), bovine respiratory syncytial virus (BRSV), bovine parainfluenza virus
3 (BPIV-3) and bovine adenovirus 3 (BAV-3) by ELISA. Bacteriological
cultivation was carried out from lung samples taken after cutting the same
animals. The seropositivity rates which were determined for 5 viruses in
cattle (BoHV- 1, BVDV, BRSV, BPIV-3 and BAV-3) were 7.14%, 50%, 94.64%,
94.64% and 82.14% respectively. The presence of antibodies against the
viruses was as follows; 5.36% of cattle had antibodies against only one
virus, 14.29% against two, 30.36% against three, 44.64% against four and
5.36% against five viruses. A total of 36 bacterial agents were isolated from
30 out of 56 lung samples. From the lung samples, only one bacterium was
isolated from 39.3% (22/56) samples, and more than one bacterium from 14.3%
(8/56). Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus spp. were
detected as the most often isolated agents. Compared to bacteria, the rates
of viral infections associated with Escherichia coli (BRSV+BPIV-3+BAV-
3+Escherichia coli; 8.92% and BRSV+BPIV-3+Escherichia coli; 5.35%) were
higher. As a consequence, it was thought that primary agents which were the
viruses and bacteria may have attended as secondary factors in respiratory
tract infections of dairy cattle.
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