Cows can suffer abnormalities during pregnancy leading to mummification of the foetus or resulting from maternal or foetal abnormality. All cases where the pregnancy terminates early and the foetus is expulsed are called abortions.
As there are multiple causes of abortion and the detection of abortions in a herd can vary significantly depending on the husbandry system and calving pattern, the incidence of abortion at herd level also varies markedly. It has been suggested that an abortion rate of 5% or more in a herd should be considered an indication of an abortion problem (Deas, 1981).
The causes of abortion have been classified by Boyd and Gray (1992) as follows:
Infectious:
- Non-specific
- Specific
- Drug-induced (prostaglandins)
- Insemination/intra-uterine infusion
- Hypothyroidism
- Trauma/stress (transport, noise, veterinary treatment etc.)
- High fever and endotoxins (toxic plants, nitrate/nitrite, fungal toxins, other disease)
- Nutritional (malnutrition, vitamin A/selenium/vitamin E deficiency, goitre)
- Twin pregnancy
- Genetic (malformation)
The most important infectious abortion agents are:
- Salmonellosis (particularly Salmonella dublin)
- Listeriosis
- Leptospirosis
- Neospora caninum abortion
- Bovine Viral Diarrhoea (BVD)
- Infectious Bovine Rhinotracheitis (IBR)
- Campylobacteriosis (see below)
- Fungal/mycotic abortion (see below)
- Epizootic/chlamydial abortion (see below)
- Trichomoniasis (see below)
- Brucellosis (see below)
Fungal abortions are associated with contaminated feed and are either sporadic or occur in small outbreaks, typically between the fifth and seventh months of pregnancy.
Epizootic abortion in cattle, caused by Chlamydia spp., has been reported in the UK in recent years and is seen as an emerging cause of contagious abortion in cattle.
Abortions caused by trichomoniasis and brucellosis are extremely rare in the UK, as both diseases have been subject to statutory disease control measures. Brucellosis is a notifiable disease and its control is still carried our as a statutory measure under th
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