Scours
Dairy Cattle Disease
Disease description
Scours, or diarrhea, is a common result of bacterial
and viral infections of baby calves. Calves are especially vulnerable
to disease because
their immune systems have not yet developed, and they face many
stresses in the first few hours of life. Infected calves can
quickly infect
other newborn calves.
Scours can be caused by coronavirus, rotavirus,
K99 E. coli bacteria or Clostridium perfringens Type C. It is
important to choose a
product with broad-spectrum scours protection because of the
many different
causes.
Clinical signs
Scouring calves have diarrhea that ranges from moderate
to severe, and results in dehydration, depression and sometimes
death.
Calves that do survive are often weak and do poorly throughout
their
lives, which is the reason prevention is so important. Viruses
and bacteria
destroy the lining of the small intestine, causing large amounts
of fluid loss. Some types of scours are more prevalent in
very young (0-7 days) calves, while others tend to appear later,
up to 21 days
after birth.
Prevention
Management of the cow, the calf and the environment
are all essential in preventing scours.
The best way to prevent
calf scours is to vaccinate the
pregnant cow with an initial dose of Scour
Bos 9 8 to 16 weeks prior to calving,
so that she can pass protection on to the calf through
colostrum. Scour Bos 9 helps protects calves against multiple
strains
of rotavirus, coronavirus, 4 strains of E. coli and
Clostridium perfringens Type
C. Revaccinate with Scour Bos 4 (rota and coronavirus)
4 weeks prior to calving. In the second year and beyond,
vaccinate with one dose of Scour Bos 9 at 8 to 10 weeks
prior to calving.
Good management includes making sure calves get
enough colostrum in the first 12 hours, separating sick calves
from healthy
calves, practicing
good sanitation when working young calves, and providing
as much protection as possible from wet, cold weather
and wind.
For those management situations where coronavirus
or rotavirus are not present, Bovine
Pili Shield + C can
be given from
8 to 16 weeks prior to calving to help prevent
scours caused
by E.
coli and C. perfringens Type
C.
If the dam was not vaccinated,
or if the quantity or quality of colostrum is low, newborn calves
can
also
benefit from
Bovine Ecolizer+C20.
This no-stress oral product gives calves direct
protection against E. coli bacteria and C.
perfringens Type
C. |