Contagious
Environment
Treatment
Case-based
I'm feeling lucky
100

Chronic mastitis is primarily due to which pathogens: contagious or environmental? 

Contagious 

100

What kind of environment do cows need to limit their chance of getting environmental mastitis? 

Clean, dry, comfortable 

100

Which contagious pathogen can be completely eradicated from a herd? 

Strep agalactiae - only lives within the mammary gland 

100

A healthy cow presents to you because the producer has noticed some clots in her milk. You do a quick PE and everything is within normal limits. How would you classify this cow's mastitis? (Is she clinical, if yes what severity?) 

Mild clinical (Abnormal milk but normal cow) 

100

What is a good SCC for a cow? 

100,000 cells/ml 

200

What are the three major contagious pathogens? (Bonus: which is most prevalent worldwide?) 

Staph aureus - most prevalent 
Strep agalactiae
Mycoplasma bovis 

200

What are the 2 major environmental pathogen groups? 

Coliforms (E. coli and Klebsiella)
Environmental Streps 

200

What should be the veterinarian's therapy objective when treating a case of mastitis? 

Bacteriological cure 

200

On a routine check, a cow was found to have a CMT score of 3. The milk appears normal in all four quarters. This cow would be described as having what kind of mastitis? 

Subclinical (milk looks normal) 

200

What are the two most common times that a cow is susceptible to mastitis? 

Calving and drying off 
300

What parameter of mastitis should make you think more contagious pathogens over environmental before you have culture results?

High SCC - more associated with contagious pathogens 
300

Which form of environmental mastitis will you always treat when clinical? 

Environmental Streps (dysgalactiae and uberis)
They are Gram (+) so many products are effective! 

300

What is the only IMM antibiotic that E. coli might be susceptible to? 

Ceftiofur (Spectramast) 

300

2 yo Holstein that was cultured at freshening and found to be infected with S. aureus in her LR quarter. One month later on re-culture, the heifer was still positive. A CMT reveals a SCC of 2.7 million cells/mL. (zero in other 3 quarters). The heifer has not been bred. What is the best option for her? 

Treat with IMM antibiotics and re-culture at 2 week intervals
(Heifers have greater chance of cure (50%), so always treat!) 

300

Which mastitis pathogen is found in water sources, particularly can be found in drop hoses? 

Pseudomonas aeruginosa (fun fact: smells like grape Kool-aid)

400

What are important control measures for contagious pathogens? 

Good milking hygiene
Post-milking teat dip that covers the teat orifice
Single use towels
Back flushing
Etc 

400

What is the best bedding to use in stalls and why? 

Sand
Klebsiella likes wood shavings
Environmental Streps love straw
E. coli is in manure solids 

400

Why should banamine be a part of the protocol when treating a cow for mastitis? 

Combats the endotoxins released when killing bacteria (like TNF alpha) 

400

A cow presents with clots in her milk, a SCC of 2.7 million, decreased rumen contractions, a pulse of 108 and is 5-6% dehydrated. What is the most important treatment that this cow needs? 

IV fluids - most important thing for the severe clinical mastitis cow! (Rumen is weak, so she needs them IV) 

400

Which organism typically shows some form of hemolysis on culture? 

S. aureus

500

What is the most common pathogen in herds that don't teat dip post-milking? 

Corynebacterium bovis 

500

Which environmental bacteria is associated with contaminated teat dip, and colonies are orange on blood agar? 

Serratia

500

Describe how treatments differs between the three contagious pathogens. 

S. aureus - Tx depends on age, value, health of animal; always treat heifers 

S. agalactiae - always treat because eradication possible 

M. bovis - no effective treatment, most likely cull 

500

Okay not really a case but tell me the CMT cores and associated SCC. :) 

0 - 100,000

Trace - 300,000
1 - 900,000
2 - 2.7 million 
3 - 8.1 million 

500

What is the only other bacteria, besides S. aureus, that has been seen to cause gangrene mastitis? 

Bacillus