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Modifiable management practices to improve udder health in dairy cattle during the dry period and early lactation: a scoping review

McMullen, C. K. and Sargeant, J. M. and Kelton, D. F. and Churchill, K. J. and Cousins, K. S. and Winder, C. B.

Journal of Dairy Science (2021) 104: 10143–10157

DOI: 10.3168/jds.2020-19873

Abstract

The objective of this scoping review was to characterize all available literature on modifiable management practices used during the dry period that have been evaluated for their effects on udder health in dairy cattle during the dry period and the subsequent lactation. Five databases and two conference proceedings were searched for relevant literature. Articles published in or after 1990 were eligible for inclusion. Eligible interventions or exposures were restricted to modifiable management practices; however, antimicrobial and teat sealant products were enumerated but not further characterized, as systematic reviews have been published on this topic. Other modifiable management practices were reported in 229 articles. Nutrition (n = 79), which included ration formulation and delivery (n = 44) and vitamin and mineral additives (n = 35), was the most commonly reported practice, followed by vaccines (n = 40) and modification of dry period length (n = 27). Risk of clinical mastitis (CM) was the most commonly reported outcome (n = 151); however, reporting of outcome risk periods varied widely between articles. Cure of existing intramammary infections (IMI) over the dry period (n = 40) and prevention of new IMI over the dry period (n = 54) were most commonly reported with a risk period between calving and 30 d in milk. Future systematic reviews with meta-analyses could target management practices such as nutrition, vaccines, and dry period length to quantify their effects on improving udder health during the dry period and early lactation. However, the variation in reporting of time at risk for CM and other outcomes challenges the ability of future synthesis work to inform management decisions on the basis of efficacy to cure or prevent IMI and CM. Consensus on which core outcomes should be evaluated in mastitis research and the selection of consistent risk periods for specific outcomes in animal trials is imperative.

Citation

McMullen, C. K., Sargeant, J. M., Kelton, D. F., Churchill, K. J., Cousins, K. S., & Winder, C. B. (2021). Modifiable management practices to improve udder health in dairy cattle during the dry period and early lactation: a scoping review. Journal of Dairy Science, 104(9), 10143–10157. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2020-19873 Animals, Female, Cattle, cattle, cows, dairy cattle, dairy cows, meta-analysis, vaccines, systematic reviews, Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use, Dairy Animals [LL110], lactation, data analysis, vitamins, literature reviews, milk, modification, Milk, Animal Health and Hygiene (General) [LL800], Animal Welfare [LL810], infections, risk factors, synthesis, databases, Cell Count/veterinary, data banks, prevention, variation, Lactation, factors of production, farm management, antiinfective agents, antimicrobials, anti-microbial properties, antimicrobial properties, dry period, mastitis, Mammary Glands, Animal, calving, udders, drying off, feed rations, production factors, subclinical mastitis, teat sealant, teats, udder quarters, Lactic Acid, *Cattle Diseases/drug therapy, *Mastitis, Bovine/drug therapy/prevention & control

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