When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: swollen pastern and fetlock treatment in cattle vaccine

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bovine alphaherpesvirus 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bovine_alphaherpesvirus_1

    Vaccination is widely used both to protect cattle clinically in the case of infection and significantly reduce the shedding of the virus. Vaccination provides herd immunity, which lowers the likelihood of an animal coming into contact with an infected animal. Both inactivated and live attenuated vaccines are available. Immunity usually lasts ...

  3. Beef cattle vaccination in Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beef_cattle_vaccination_in...

    Vibrosis vaccines ensures the reduction in late calves and allows pregnancy rates and calving percentages to stay at their natural levels. Pestivirus vaccine should be administered to heifers and previously unvaccinated cows. The vaccine prevents nasal shedding of the disease to protect the reproductive potential of heifers and cows.

  4. Blackleg (disease) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackleg_(disease)

    Burning the upper layer of soil to eradicate left-over spores is the best way to stop the spread of blackleg from diseased cattle. Diseased cattle should be isolated. Treatment is generally unrewarding due to the rapid progression of the disease, but penicillin is the drug of choice for treatment. Treatment is only effective in the early stages ...

  5. Tropical theileriosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropical_theileriosis

    Selection of cattle for good ability to acquire immune resistance to ticks is potentially effective. Endemic stability is a state where animals are affected at a low levels or not as susceptible to the disease, and this may be encouraged in endemic areas. [3] Vaccination is available and should be performed in breeds that are susceptible to ...

  6. Pastern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastern

    The pastern is a part of the leg of a horse between the fetlock and the top of the hoof. It incorporates the long pastern bone (proximal phalanx) and the short pastern bone (middle phalanx), which are held together by two sets of paired ligaments to form the pastern joint (proximal interphalangeal joint).

  7. Animal vaccination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_vaccination

    Pasteur also invented an anthrax vaccine for sheep and cattle in 1881, and the rabies vaccine in 1884. [8] Monkeys and rabbits were used to grow and attenuate the rabies virus. [9] Starting in 1881, dried spinal cord material from infected rabbits was given to dogs to inoculate them against rabies. [10]

  8. Clostridial vaccine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clostridial_vaccine

    A clostridial vaccine is a vaccine for sheep and cattle that protects against diseases caused by toxins produced by an infection with one or more Clostridium bacteria. [1] Clostridial vaccines are often administered to pregnant ewes a few weeks before they are due to give birth, in order to give passive immunity to their lambs. [1]

  9. Fetlock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetlock

    Fetlock joint: the joint between the cannon bone and the pastern. Fetlock is the common name in horses, large animals, and sometimes dogs for the metacarpophalangeal and metatarsophalangeal joints (MCPJ and MTPJ). Although it somewhat resembles the human ankle in appearance, the joint is homologous to the ball of the foot.