4 minute read

Keeping teats healthy at dry off

STOCK VETS VOICE

Words by: Lisa Whitfield

The cups have just come off, the teats are clean, right? Get the job done and let’s

So you have worked hard all season. go home. It’s time to dry the cows off and Wait a moment – you have put in celebrate with a few days hours of effort getting to this point off. in the season, and you have

You have your list of cows invested thousands of dollars in sorted out, you have cell count dry-off products, but you can’t records, you have done your be bothered to clean the teats dry cow consultation and have before administering it? the products ready to go. Now There are three situations to get the job done. in which I regularly see hygiene

Having worked so hard to get to Lisa Whitfield being ignored when it comes to this point, you know you should mastitis management. clean the teats thoroughly before you dry Firstly, when administering products her off. However, you just want to get for drying off, secondly when taking milk the job done as quickly as you can, and samples for culture and finally, when you can’t be bothered with the hassle of administering mastitis treatments during cleaning the teats. lactation.

When taking milk samples, large pottles usually mean you collect too much milk and risk contaminating the sample. In this image, each pottle at the front, is represented by the equivalent number of samples you could fit in it using smaller 5ml pottles.

HYGIENE AND BACTERIA

In terms of the potential to permanently damage a cow’s lifetime production, or even result in her death, lack of hygiene at drying off is a really significant problem.

Teats which have just had the cups taken off, are not magically free of infectious agents.

A visually clean teat does not mean that there are no bacteria there. Unless you disinfect the teat end, bacteria will be present.

Unless you take care with where you hold the teat and how you handle the tubes, bacteria can easily be reintroduced even following disinfection.

In fact, if you take a swab of the end of the teat after cups off, you will grow a beautiful but nasty range of organisms, all of which can give a cow mastitis if you inoculate it into her udder using an intramammary tube.

MILK SAMPLES

Hygiene is also important when you are taking milk samples, however in this case you are wasting money if you do not put in the effort to do it correctly.

If you take a milk sample but do not disinfect the teat, you will contaminate your sample with dirt and bacteria from the teat end.

Left: When you take a swab from the end of the teat after cups-off without disinfecting it, this is what can grow. Right: Lack of hygiene at drying off is a really significant problem, Lisa Whitfield says.

With milk sampling, you also must consider hygienic handling with the pottle and pottle lid – if the inside of either of these items become contaminated with bacteria, you ruin the milk sample and waste your money.

Did you know that for a milk sample, you only need a tiny amount of milk? In fact, less than 0.5ml is a sufficient sample to culture from.

The pottle into which you take your milk sample should reflect the size of the sample you are taking – you do not need an 80ml pottle for a 0.5ml sample.

Also, you do not need 80ml of milk for a milk culture. Ask for 5ml pottles and collect about 1cm of milk into it – less than one full strip of milk is all you need.

When you collect more milk than you need, you increase the risk of contaminating the sample – the less times you need to strip the teat the less chance of contamination falling into your pottle.

“In terms of the potential to permanently damage a cow’s lifetime production, or even result in her death, lack of hygiene at drying off is a really significant problem.”

INTRAMAMMARY TUBES

Finally, intramammary tubes for mastitis treatment during lactation. It is a real hassle to have to get a wipe for the teat before you treat the cow with an intramammary mastitis treatment – when the pressure is on in the shed, it is the first thing that gets missed. I know this as I struggle with it myself.

However, the risk is no different to drying off. If you have bad luck and introduce bacteria into the udder when you administer a tube, you might just kill the cow. The best way to make it easy for yourself is to keep a small pottle of methylated spirits-soaked cotton wool next to where you keep your mastitis tubes.

That way, if it’s there and ready to go, there really are no excuses for not using them.

• Lisa Whitfield is a Manawatu-based production animal veterinarian with Lisa

Whitfield Farm Vet Services.

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