Mastitis Control Programs:
Bovine Mastitis and Milking Management
AS-1129,
April 1997
J. W. Schroeder, Extension Dairy Specialist
Mastitis is complex; there
is no simple solution to
its control. Some aspects are well understood
and documented in the scientific literature. Others are
controversial, and opinions are often presented as facts. The
information and interpretations presented here represent the
best judgments currently accepted by the National Mastitis Council.
To simplify understanding
of the mastitis complex, it is useful to consider that
three major factors are involved in this disease: the
microorganisms as the causative agent, the
cow
as host, and the environment, which can influence both
the cow and the microorganisms.
(Figure 1.)
Well over 100 different microorganisms can
cause mastitis, and these vary greatly in the route by which they
reach the cow and in the nature of the disease they cause.
Cows contract udder infection at different ages and
at different stages of the lactation cycle. Cows also vary in
their ability to overcome an infection once it has been
established. Therefore, the cow plays an active role in the
development of mastitis.
The cows' environment influences both the
numbers and types of bacteria they are exposed to and their ability
to resist these microorganisms. However, through
appropriate management practices, the environment can be
controlled to reduce this exposure and enhance resistance to
udder disease.
Practical measures are now available to maintain
common forms of mastitis at relatively
low and acceptable levels in the majority of herds. While
continued research is needed to control the less common
forms of intramammary infection, herd problems are often the result
of failure to apply the proven mastitis control practices consistently and to consider all aspects of the disease problem.
Definitions
Mastitis -- inflammation of the mammary gland caused
by microorganisms, usually bacteria, that invade the udder,
multiply, and produce toxins that are harmful to the
mammary gland.
Clinical Mastitis -- visible signs of mastitis which include:
- Mild signs flakes or clots in the milk, may have
slight swelling of infected quarter.
- Severe signs secretion abnormal, hot, swollen quarter
or udder; cow may have a fever, rapid pulse, loss of
appetite, dehydration and depression; death may occur.
Subclinical Mastitis -- no visible signs of the disease:
- Somatic cell count (SCC) of the milk will be elevated.
- Bacteriological culturing of milk will detect bacteria in
the milk.
- Causes the greatest financial loss to dairy farmers
through lowered milk production.
- For every clinical case of mastitis, there will be 15 to 40
sub-clinical cases.
Somatic Cell Count (SCC) -- the number of leukocytes
or white blood cells per milliliter of milk.
- Normal milk will have less than 200,000 cells per milliliter.
- An elevated SCC is an indication of inflammation in
the udder.
- Bulk tank SCC gives an indication of the level of sub-clinical mastitis and the loss of milk production in a herd
due to mastitis.
Economic Loss
Economic loss to mastitis in the United States is estimated to
be approximately $185/cow annually. If we assume
the same milk price and this value is multiplied by the total number
of milking cows (9.5 million head), the total annual cost of
mastitis is about $1.8 billion. This is approximately 10% of the
total value of farm milk sales, and about two-thirds of this loss
is due to reduced milk production in subclinically infected cows.
The average production loss per lactation for one
infected quarter is about 1,600 pounds. Other losses are due to
discarded abnormal milk and milk withheld from cows treated
with antibiotic, costs of early replacement of affected
cows, reduced sale value of culled cows, costs of drugs and veterinary services, and increased labor costs. The estimated
costs of these factors are shown in Table 1.
Table 1. Estimated annual losses due
to mastitis.*
-----------------------------------------
Loss Percent of
per Cow Total
Source of Loss ($) (%)
-----------------------------------------
Reduced Production 121.00 66.0
Discarded Milk 10.45 5.7
Replacement Cost 41.73 22.6
Extra Labor 1.14 .1
Treatment 7.36 4.1
Veterinary Services 2.72 1.5
TOTAL 184.40 100.0
-----------------------------------------
*Assumptions: One-third of cows infected in
an average of 1.5 quarters; milk loss 856
pounds per infected quarter; milk price
$12.07 per hundred weight.
Source: Current Concepts in Bovine Mastitis,
1996. National Mastitis Council.
These estimates do not include additional costs
arising from mastitis-associated
problems related to antibiotic
residues in human foods, milk quality control, dairy
manufacturing, nutritional quality of
milk, degrading of milk supplies due to high bacteria or
somatic cell counts, and interference with genetic improvement
of dairy animals.
Economics of Mastitis Control
When analyzing the cost of mastitis control, consider
first the cost in lost production. The bulk tank SCC is a good
place to start. Table 2 estimates expected losses and
prevalence of infection for elevated bulk tank SCC.
Consider as well the possible savings when mastitis is
effectively managed. The value of increased milk sales
from reduced mastitis more than offset the costs of an
effective control program. (Table 3.)
Table 2. Estimated infection prevalence
and losses in milk production
associated with elevated bulk tank SCC.
-------------------------------------
Bulk Tank
SCC Percent Percent
(1,000's/ ml) Infected Production
in Herd Quarters Loss*
-------------------------------------
200 6 0
500 16 6
1000 32 18
1500 48 29
-------------------------------------
*Production loss calculated as a percent
of production expected at 200,000 cells ml.
Source: Current Concepts of Bovine Mastitis.
National Mastitis Council, 1996.
Table 3. Estimated annual savings from an effective
mastitis control program.
----------------------------------------------------
National Mastitis Council Study (Table 1):
Production per cow (+1,069 lb @ $12 cwt) $121.08
Clinical mastitis reduced 40%
Discarded milk $10.45 x 40% 4.18
Total Return $125.26
Mastitis Control Costs (per cow annually)
Teat dip $10.00
Dry cow medication $4.00
Paper towels $10.00
Total Cost $24.00
Net Return to mastitis control $101.26
(per cow annually)
----------------------------------------------------
Effects on Milk Production, Composition
and Quality
Mastitis reduces milk yield and alters milk composition. The
magnitude of these changes in individual cows varies with the
severity and duration of the infection and the causative
microorganisms. Mastitis is almost always caused by bacteria. These
microorganisms produce toxins that can directly damage milk-producing tissue
of the mammary gland, and the presence of bacteria initiates
inflammation within the mammary tissue in an attempt to eliminate
the invading microorganisms. The inflammation contributes to decreased milk production and is primarily responsible for the
compositional changes observed in milk from infected quarters and cows.
In general, compositional changes involve an increase in blood
components present in milk and a decrease in normal milk constituents.
Production
The Dairy Herd Improvement Association (DHIA) has
adopted an SCC scoring system that divides the SCC of compositive
milk into 10 categories from 0 to 9 known as linear scores. The
DHIA programs determine the SCC on each milking cow each month
and report either the SCC or the linear score. Linear scores can be
used to estimate production losses, but the average linear score for
the lactation most accurately reflects reduced milk yield. Cows
with higher lactation average SCC scores produce less milk (Table 4).
Table 4. Somatic cell counts as they relate to
estimated milk losses.
----------------------------------------------------
Estimated
Lactation Milk
Average Somatic Production
Linear Cell Milk Loss Per
SCC CMT WMT Count Loss Cow/Year*
Score# (Score) (mm) (cells/ml) (%) (lb)
----------------------------------------------------
2 Negative -- 50,000 --- ---
3 Negative 2 100,000 3 -400
4 5 200,000 6 -800
Trace 8 300,000 7 -1,000
5 10 400,000 8 -1,200
12 500,000 9 -1,300
1 14 600,000 10 -1,400
16 700,000 -1,500
6 18 800,000 11 -1,600
20 900,000 -1,650
21 1,000,000 12 -1,700
<2 24 1,200,000 >12 -1,700
7 29 1,600,000 -2,000
----------------------------------------------------
*Based on 14,000-15,000 lb average/cow/year, lasted in >2.
Linear score calculation from SCC. Example: SCC = 2000,000/ml.
CMT Interpretation:
Negative - Mixture remains liquid with no evidence of the
formation of a precipitate.
Trace - A slight precipitate or small flakes form and then
disappear.
1 (weak positive) - A distinct precipitate forms.
2 (distinct positive) - The mixture thickens immediately
with some gel formation.
Source: Dairy Herd Improvement Association and Philpot (1984).
Linear score calculation from the SCC.
--------------------------------------------------------------
Example: SCC = 200 (i.e., 200,000/ml)
1. Divide the reported SCC by 100.* 200/100 = 2
2. Determine the natural log (In). In 2 = .693147
3. Divide this value by .693147. .693147/.693147 = 1
4. Add "3" to the result. 1 + 3 = 4 linear score
--------------------------------------------------------------
*If SCC is expressed as 1,000s of cells/ml, divide by 100,000:
(200,000/ 100,000) = 2.
Production losses in older cows are about double those of
first lactation cows. Determining the exact amount of milk lost at
a specific SCC or linear score or for any one cow is not
possible. However, the fact remains that elevated SCC results in major
losses to dairy producers, and elevated SCC is almost always due to
the presence of intramammary infection.
Composition
Changes in milk composition accompany the increase in
SCC following infection of the mammary gland. Table 5
compares the composition of normal, low SCC milk with milk having a
high SCC. These comparisons fre-quently are made between
high and low SCC milk from opposite quarters of the same cow
to reduce cow to cow variation. Elevated SCC is associated
with a decrease in the content of lactose and fat in milk
because of a reduced ability of the mam-mary gland to produce
these components. Some studies have shown no change in
fat percentage, yet total fat production declines with the
decrease in milk production.
Table 5. Changes in milk composition
associated with an elevated SCC.*
----------------------------------------------
Normal Milk With Percentage
Constituent Milk High SCC of Normal
----------------------------------------------
------------- % --------------
Solids-Not-Fat 8.9 8.8 99
Fat 3.5 3.2 91
Lactose 4.9 4.4 90
Total Protein 3.61 3.56 99
Total Casein 2.8 2.3 82
Whey Protein .8 1.3 162
Serum Albumin .02 .07 350
Lactoferrin .02 .10 500
Immunoglobulins .10 .60 600
Sodium .057 .105 184
Chloride .091 .147 161
Potassium .173 .157 91
Calcium .12 .04 33
----------------------------------------------
*Example of compositional changes found in
various studies.
Although there may be little change in the total protein
con-tent as a result of subclinical mastitis, there are marked
and significant changes in the types of proteins present. The
major milk protein is casein. This protein has high nutritional
qualities and is very important in cheese manufacturing. Casein
content of milk with a high SCC is reduced, but lower quality
whey proteins increase in concentration, resulting in a similar
total protein content. The lower quality whey proteins are
blood serum proteins such as serum albumin, immunoglobulins,
and transferrin, which increase in milk as a result of the
destruction of membranes that normally prevent blood serum
proteins from entering milk.
Sodium and chloride increase in high SCC milk due
to increased passage of these minerals from blood into
milk. Potassium, normally the predominant mineral in
milk, declines due to its passage out of milk to lymph between
damaged secretory cells. Most of the calcium in milk is
associated with casein, and disruption of casein synthesis results
in reduced calcium levels in milk from mastitic cows.
These alterations in mineral content affect the pH and conductivity
of milk. The pH of normal milk is generally around 6.6, but
may increase to 6.9 or higher in milk from mastitic quarters.
Other important compositional changes include
increases in enzymes originating from damaged
mammary tissue, the blood stream, or milk somatic cells. Many of
these enzymes negatively impact milk quality. An increase in
the enzyme lipase can raise the content of free fatty acids,
which produce off-flavors in milk from mastitic cows. An
additional example is the enzyme plasmin, which may double in
concentration in high SCC milk. Plasmin attacks casein and can
markedly reduce the casein content, resulting in lower yields
of cheese and other manufactured products and off-flavors in milk.
Quality
Mastitis not only reduces dairy producer profits but also
results in important and costly losses to processors due to poor
quality milk. Reduced quality is detected with herd milk at
400,000 cells/ml. A variety of dairy products are affected,
including cheeses, powdered milk, fermented products, and fluid
milk. Progressive milk plants pay on milk quality for obvious
reasons, but quality premiums also pay big dividends to producers,
as shown in Table 6. For example, a 100-cow herd averaging
50 lbs milk per cow per day and receiving $0.25 per
hundredweight premium would get $375 more per month in milk receipts.
Table 6. Dollar return per month in a
100 cow herd with quality premiums of
$0.10 to $0.50/cwt and average lbs of
milk/cow/day from 30 to 70 lbs.
-------------------------------------------
Premium
per cwt Quality Premium Return per 100
milk cows per month (30 days)
-------------------------------------------
$0.50 $450 $600 $750 $900 $1,050
$0.45 $405 $540 $675 $810 $945
$0.40 $360 $480 $600 $720 $840
$0.35 $315 $420 $525 $630 $735
$0.30 $270 $360 $450 $540 $630
$0.25 $225 $300 $375 $450 $525
$0.20 $180 $240 $300 $360 $420
$0.15 $135 $180 $225 $270 $315
$0.10 $90 $120 $150 $180 $210
-------------------------------------------
Source: W.L. Crist, et al. Mastitis and Its
Control. Univ. of Kentucky.
Development of Mastitis
A basic knowledge of mammary gland anatomy and
physiology is necessary to understand how mastitis develops. The interior
of each quarter is composed of a teat cistern, gland cistern,
milk ducts, and glandular tissue (Figure 2-A). The
glandular tissue or secretory portion contains millions of
microscopic sacs called alveoli (Figure 2-B). Each alveolus is lined with
milk-producing epithelial cells and is surrounded by muscle cells
that contract and squeeze milk from the alveolus during
milking. Blood vessels bring nutrients to each alveolus where
epithelial cells convert them into milk. Between milkings, milk
accumulates in the alveolar spaces, milk ducts, and cisterns.
During milking, the accumulated fluid is removed through the teat ducts.
Figure 2. Structure of the mammary gland showing teat and gland
cisterns, milk ducts, and glandular tissue (A). Glandular tissue is made up
of many small microscopic sacs called alveoli that are lined by
milk-producing epithelial cells (B). There are millions of alveoli
within each mammary gland.
Invasion of the Udder
Mastitis results once bacteria pass through the teat duct
and multiply in milk-producing tissues. Microorganisms
breach the teat duct in several ways. Between milkings,
microorganisms may pass through the teat duct by multiplying inside
the duct, or by physical movement resulting from pressure
placed on the teat end as the cow moves about. During
machine milking, microorganisms may be propelled into or through
the teat duct into the teat cistern.
The potential for invasion is greatly increased by
bacteria that reside in or colonize the teat duct. Such
colonizations occur in both lactating and dry cows, and the colonizing
bacteria may survive for months, serving as sources of
bacteria for infecting the gland. The practice of dipping teats with
an effective bacteriacide both before and after each
milking greatly reduces teat duct colonization.
To better understand the important difference
among mastitis causing organisms, the following list summarizes
contagious and environmental mastitis.
Contagious Versus Environmental Mastitis,
Understanding the Difference
Controlling Contagious Mastitis
Caused by:
- Streptococcus agalactiae (S. agalactiae)
Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus)
Streptococcus dysgalactiae (S. dysgalactiae)
Primary source:
Method of spread:
- From infected quarters to other quarters
and cows primarily at milking time.
Indicators of problem:
- Bulk tank somatic cell count (SCC) above
300,000 cells/ml.
- DHIA SCC score above 3.2.
- More than 15% of cows with a DHIA SCC
score of 5 or greater.
- Frequent flare ups of clinical mastitis, often
in the same cows.
- Bacterial culturing of cows shows S.
agalactiae and/or S. aureus infections.
Control recommendations:
- Develop program to prevent the spread of
bacteria at milking time.
- Eliminate existing infections by treating all
cows at drying off and culling chronic cows.
Goals:
- Eradicate S. agalactiae from the herd.
- Reduce S. aureus infections to less than 5%
of the cows in the herd.
Controlling Environmental Mastitis
Caused by:
Coliforms
- Escherichia coli
- Klebsiella pneumoniae
- Klebsiella oxytoca
- Enterobacter aerogenes
Environmental streptococci
- S. uberis
- S. bovis
- S. disgalactiae
- Enterococcus faecium
- Enterococcus faecalis
Primary source:
- The environment of the cow.
Indicator of problem:
- High rate of clinical mastitis, usually in early
lactation or during hot weather. Somatic cell
count may be low (less than 300,000).
Control recommendations:
- Reduce the number of bacteria to which the teat end is exposed.
- Improve cleanliness of cow surroundings,
especially in late dry period and at calving.
- Improve prepping procedures to ensure
clean, dry teats are being milked.
Goal:
- Reduce clinical mastitis to less than 3% of
the milking cows/month.
Controlling Contagious Mastitis
Staphylococcus aureus infections remain the largest
mastitis problem on North Dakota dairy farms. Cure rate with
antibiotic therapy during lactation is very low. Many "staph" cows
become chronic and have to be culled.
Streptococcus agalactiae responds well to
antibiotic therapy and can be eradicated from dairy herds with
good mastitis control practices including teat dipping and dry
cow treatment.
Streptococcus dysgalactiae may live almost anywhere: in
the udder, rumen, and feces, and in the barn. They can be
controlled with proper sanitation and are moderately susceptible
to antibiotics.
Prevention - Improved milking procedures:
- Milk clean, dry teats.
- Keep liner slips to a
minimum.
- Teat dip with an effective germicidal teat dip.
Maintain milking system.
Eliminating infections:
- Treat all quarters of all cows at drying off with antibiotic
products specifically designed for dry cow therapy.
- Cull chronically infected cows.
- Steps to follow to control mastitis and lower somatic
cell count:
- Teat dip.
- Dry cow treat.
- Practice proper milking procedure.
- Use properly functioning milking system.
- Maintain clean, dry environ ment for the cows.
- Cull chronic mastitis cows.
Use DHIA SCC program to monitor mastitis in the herd.
Controlling Environmental Mastitis
Prevention:
- Reduce the number of bacteria to which the
teat end is exposed.
Environment:
- Cow environment should
be as clean and dry as possible.
- Cow should not have access to manure, mud, or pools of
stagnant water.
- Dry cow environment is as important as lactating cow
environment.
- Calving area must be clean.
- Properly design and maintain free stalls.
Bedding:
- Bacteria numbers in bedding depends on
available nutrients, amount of contamination, moisture,
and temperature.
- Inorganic materials (such as crushed limestone or sand)
are low in nutrients and moisture, and thus bacteria.
- Finely chopped organic bedding (such as sawdust,
shavings, recycled manure, pelleted corncobs,
various seed hulls, chopped straw) are frequently high in
bacteria numbers.
Teat dipping:
- Post milking teat dipping with a germicidal
(germ-killing) dip is recommended.
- Controls the spread of contagious mastitis.
- Exerts no control over coliform infections.
- Barrier dips are reported to reduce new coliform
infections; however, they do not appear to be as effective
against environmental streptococci and the
contagious pathogens.
- Attempts to control environ mental mastitis during
the dry period, using either germicidal or barrier
dips, have been unsuccessful.
Dry cow therapy:
- Recommended for all quarters of all cows
at drying off.
- Helps control environmental streptococci during the
early dry period.
- Has little or no value in controlling coliforms.
- Not effective during the period prior to calving.
Backflushing milker claws between cows:
- Will not control environmental mastitis.
Proper milking procedure:
- Proper milking procedure is important.
- Wash teats, but not the udder.
- Clean and dry teats before attaching the milking
machine.
- Milking wet udders will likely increase mastitis.
Predipping:
- A germicidal teat dip reduces environmental
mastitis during lactation by 50%.
- Be sure teat dip is removed from teats before attaching
milking machine to prevent contamination of the milk.
Milking machine:
- Maintain and operate properly.
- Badly functioning milking machines result in frequent
liner slips and teat end impacts will increase
environmental mastitis.
Nutrition:
- Proper nutrition will reduce the risk of environmental
mastitis.
- Adequate levels of Vitamin E and selenium reduce the
incidence of environmental mastitis.
- There are conflicting reports whether Vitamin A and
ß- carotene influence udder health.
- Ongoing research at the University of Kentucky
indicates that copper may play a role in maintaining
the immune system in dairy cattle.
- Feed dairy cattle a balanced ration.
Vaccines:
- Not effective in preventing new infections.
- Research on vaccines to reduce
Escherichia coli and staphylococcal mastitis
infections looks promising.
Proper Milking Procedures
Proper milking procedures are important for the prevention
of mastitis and for ensuring complete milk removal from
the udder.
Cow Movement. Cows should be moved in a
quiet, gentle manner. If cows are frightened or hurried, the
milk letdown process may be disturbed, so avoid rough handling.
Mastitis Detection. Milking may begin with a check of
all quarters for mastitis. It is acceptable to strip milk onto
the floor in a milking parlor or flat barn. Any cows that
show clinical mastitis should be examined and
appropriate action taken. If fore milking is not done, visual checking
for inflamed quarters is done by milkers and herd health people.
Udder Preparation. The object of udder preparation is
to ensure that clean dry udders and teats are being
milked. Single service paper towels or washed and dried cloth
towels may be used.
Premilking Teat Dip. The procedure for predipping
involves washing teats with water and a sanitizer. The teats
are then dried with an individual towel and dipped or
sprayed with the sanitizer. A 30-second contact with sanitizer is
needed to kill organisms. Then the sanitizer is wiped dry with
the towel. The cows are milked and teats are dipped with the
same type of sanitizer to prevent chemical reactions that
could cause irritation to teats.
Predipping may be beneficial in reducing mastitis, but
the actual dipping, dip contact time, and wiping with a towel
increase the total milking time. If the dip is not wiped off,
excessive chemical residues in milk may occur. If contact time is
not sufficient, then it is a very expensive premilking regime.
Milking Unit Attachment and Detachment. To attach
the milking unit to the teats, apply the cluster allowing a
minimum of air admission and adjust to prevent liner slip. Air
entering the unit may cause the propulsion of mastitis organisms
from one infected teat into a noninfected teat. This may
also happen when one teat cup is removed before the others.
Machine stripping usually is not needed on dairy
cows. Machine stripping should not take more than one minute,
and no air should be allowed to enter the teat cups while this
is being done. A downward force applied to the cluster
while massaging the udder with the other hand is all that is needed.
Following milk-out, the machine should be
removed only after the vacuum to the teats is shut off. This is
accomplished most commonly by use of a vacuum shut off valve
or milk hose clamp which prevents the backjetting of bacteria
from one teat to another.
Use of Backflush. Backflushers have been
developed to sanitize the liners and claws between milkings.
Most units on the market have four or five cycles. The first cycle is
a water rinse, followed by an iodine or similar sanitizer
rinse, a clear water rinse, and positive air dry cycle.
Research has demonstrated that backflushers do reduce
the number of bacteria on the liners between cows, but do
not reduce the number of bacteria on teats. Backflushers also
may stop the spread of contagious organisms, but this can also
be accomplished at a much lower cost by teat dipping. There is
no effect on environmental pathogens that are
encountered between milkings.
Teat dips are effective against all mastitis
organisms. They have been shown to effectively reduce
mastitis caused by S. aureus and S.
agalactiae, the most common types of mastitis found.
There seems to be much controversy about the
effectiveness of teat dipping on environmental pathogens
E. coli and S. uberis. Some research
has shown that teat dipping does not control these
organisms. These pathogens are found in the cow's surroundings; if
there is udder-deep mud, the teat dip will be removed and a
new infection may occur.
There are many effective teat dips, including iodine
at 0.1%, 0.5%, and 1.0%, and chlorhexidine at 0.5%.
Also, although it is not labeled for teat dipping, hypochlorite at
4.0% with a sodium hydroxide content less than 0.05% was effective
in field trials. There are many more teat dips on the market that
are effective in preventing new infections. Effective coverage
of the teats is more important than the type of dip being used.
If contagious bacteria, S. agalactiae, S. dysgalactiae,
S. aureus, or Mycoplasma, is present in your herd you
must dip the whole teat to the base of the udder to stop the
spread. Wand sprayers are acceptable for herds that have
environmental mastitis, since teat colonization is not a factor.
Hand-held spray bottles are the most ineffective method of
getting proper coverage of dip on the cow's teats, so they should
not be used. Dip cups, on the other hand, give the best coverage.
Dry Cow Therapy. Dry cow treatment is administered
after the last milking of the cow before the dry period.
Care must be taken to scrub the teat end with cotton and
alcohol before infusion and to use teat dip after infusion.
There are many antibiotics available for dry cow
therapy. High levels of penicillin and dihydrostreptomycin,
the cloxacillins and other products specifically for dry treatment
are effective.
Dry period therapy has been accepted because
antibiotics can be put into a slow release base that allows them to stay
in the udder longer. They are not constantly being milked out
of the udder as is the case with lactation therapy.
Antibiotics can be given in higher quantities because there is no
concern for milk levels and antibiotic residues.
While dry treatment is very effective, it must be
administered properly and dry cows must have favorable
environmental conditions. Teat ends must be scrubbed clean
with cotton alcohol pads before injecting the dry treatment.
If the teat ends are not cleaned properly, you may inject
very high numbers of bacteria into the udder which would
overwhelm the antibiotic just administered. Unsanitary
treatment procedures cause rather than eliminate mastitis.
Management of dry cows is very important in
mastitis control. If dry cows are exposed to muddy or dirty
conditions, risk of mastitis will increase. This is especially true at
calving time; cows are under much stress during this period. If
an udder is exposed to wet dirty conditions, mastitis will
increase. If you believe that your dry cow therapy program
is ineffective, it may be because of poor treatment
procedures and/or improper management of the cows during the
dry period and at calving.
Culling. Culling cows for mastitis is effective in
eliminating mastitis in the herd. Cows that have been treated
many times in a single lactation are prime candidates for culling,
as they may no longer be profitable because of discarded milk
and antibiotic costs. it is usually more profitable to carry
out preventive mastitis control procedures and cull only
old chronic cows rather than try to control mastitis by
routine culling.
Proper Treatment Procedures
In every program, some medication is required, plus dry
cow treatment protocol. This is especially important
with intramammary infusions. Extreme care must be
taken whenever anything is being infused into a cow's
udder. Careless treatment procedures can result in udder
infections resistant to treatment. Approach treatment in the same way
a surgeon approaches surgery.
- Wash hands with soap and water.
- Wash teats and udder in sanitizing solution.
- Thoroughly dry teats and udder with individual towels.
- Dip teats in an effective germicidal teat dip.
- Allow 30 seconds of contact
time before wiping off teat dip with an
individual towel.
- Thoroughly scrub the teat end with a cotton
swab soaked in alcohol. If all four quarters are being
treated, start by cleaning the teat farthest from you and
work toward the closest teat.
- Use commercial antibiotic products in single
dose containers formulated for intramammary infusion.
For dry cow therapy, use commercial antibiotic
products specifically formulated for dry cow therapy in
single dose containers. Treat teats nearest to you first,
then those farthest away to prevent contaminating
clean teat ends.
- Insert only the tip of the canula into the teat end.
Do not allow the sterile canula to touch anything prior
to infusion.
- After infusion, remove canula, squeeze teat
end with one hand, massage antibiotic up into the
quarter with the other hand.
- Dip teats in an effective germicidal teat dip
after treatment.
How to Collect
Milk Samples
Even the most successful milking management
program needs to culture samples when problems arise. Positive
identification of invading organisms can speed up solutions
to difficult challenges. When taking samples, it is imperative
that you take a sample that is not contaminated for accurate
lab analysis.
- Label sterile tubes and fill out forms ahead of
time. (Tubes with screw caps are preferred.)
- Wash hands in soap and water.
- Wash teats in sanitizing solution.
- Dry teats with individual towels.
- Discard one or two squirts of milk from each teat.
- Dip teats in germicidal teat dip.
- Allow 30 seconds of contact time before wiping off
teat dip with an individual towel.
- Thoroughly scrub the teat end with a cotton
swab soaked in alcohol. If a composite sample is
being taken from all four quarters, start with the teat
farthest from you and work toward the closest teat. Use a
clean swab on each teat.
- Open the sterile tube under the teats. Hold it at an
angle so that foreign material cannot fall into the
opening. Do not allow anything to come in contact with
the mouth of the tube. Collect one or two squirts of
milk from each quarter, starting with the closest
quarters and working toward the ones farthest away.
- Close the container before removing it from
beneath the teats.
- Refrigerate samples until they reach the lab.
If samples will not reach the lab within 24 hours,
they should be frozen and kept frozen until they reach
the lab.
Milking Machine Inspection and Maintenance Checklist
Before each milking:
Check
- vacuum controller
- milking vacuum
- hoses and teatcup liners for holes or tears
- pulsators
- air admission holes in claw or tailpiece of liner
Weekly (or every 50 hours of operation):
Set aside one day each week to perform these checks, such as every Monday
morning.
Check
- and clean vacuum controller
- and clean pulsator filters
- belts on vacuum pumps
- oil reserve on vacuum pump
- if it is time to change liners (every 1,000-2,000 milkings, or as
recommended)
- clean moisture trap
- automatic take off equipment (especially vacuum shut off)
Monthly (or every 250 hours):
Set aside one day each month to perform these checks, such as the first
Monday of each month.
Check
- and clean the pulsators
- and clean vacuum pulsation lines
- vacuum pump(s)
- check belts for wear and tension
- clean screens
- change filters on vacuum pump tank
- change oil if needed
- change liners if it is time
Dealer checks and service (every 6 months or 1,250 hours):
| Checks to be made: |
Equipment needed: |
| air delivery by vacuum pump |
air flow meter |
| reserve air flow (remaining pump capacity with units operating but
not on cows) |
air flow meter |
| pulsator rate (pulsations per minute) |
stop watch or clock |
| pulsator function and ratio |
vacuum recorder |
| vacuum level |
vacuum gauge |
| line voltage |
voltmeter |
Maintenance items:
- Check all gaskets, flappers, "O" rings, and caps which come in
contact with milk. Replace if worn.
- Clean all electric pulsator selectors and activators. Check all solenoids
and coils. Clean all plungers and vacuum lines.
- Overhaul pneumatic pulsators. Repair milk supports, milker units, etc.
Every year (or 2,500 hours of use):
- Change all solenoid coils, plungers, hoses, diaphragms, caps, gaskets,
flappers, and rubber vacuum connectors.
- Check electric timer controls, switches, motors, and parts. Grease all
bearings.
- Check milk pump seal, rubber spring, and clearances. Change gaskets.
Every two years (or 5,000 hours of use):
- Recondition entire system, including all motors, pumps, selectors, timers,
and starters.
- Replace all rubber coils, hoses, gaskets, "O" rings, springs,
and plungers. Clean entire pipeline system.
For more information on milking machines, refer to, "The Modern Way to
Effective Milking," published by the Milking Machine Manufacturers Council
of the Farm and Industrial Equipment Institute, 410 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago,
IL 60611-4251.
AS-1129, April 1997
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