Friday, 18 August 2017
Ethno Veterinary Approaches for Treatment of Bovine Mastitis
Chapter · January 2014
In book: Mastitis in Dairy Animals: An Update, Edition: First, Chapter: Ethno Veterinary Approaches for Treatment of Bovine Mastitis, Publisher: Satish Serial Publishing House, Editors: A. K. Srivastava, A. Kumaresan, A. Manimaran and Shiv Prasad, pp.249
Morkonda Rajaram Srinivasan
1st Morkonda Rajaram Srinivasan
8.38 · Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University
Ramesh S
2nd Ramesh S
Abstract
Contents: Preface. 1. Mastitis in dairy animal: current concepts and future concerns. 2. Etiology and epidemiology of bovine mastitis. 3. Functional anatomy of bovine udder. 4. Defense mechanism in bovine mammary gland. 5. Genetic determinants of mastitis in cattle. 6. Machine milking and mastitis risk. 7. Mastitis and its public health significance. 8. Economic implication of bovine mastitis a conceptual framework. 9. Impact of mastitis on reproduction efficiency. 10. Mastitis detection: traditional and advanced diagnostic techniques. 11. Pharmacological concerns for treatment of mastitis. 12. Judicious use of antibiotics in mastitis therapy. 13. Advances in treatment and control of bovine mastitis. 14. Ethno veterinary approaches for treatment of bovine mastitis. 15. Current clinical practice and strategies in bovine mastitis management. 16. Transition cow management for boosting udder immunity. 17. Dry cow therapy for mastitis control. 18. Risk management approach for udder health in dairy herds. 19. Evaluation of udder and teat conditions for udder health management. 20. Epilogue. Mastitis although not a new problem is associated with huge economic loss to the farmers and the country. In India on one hand while milk productivity is increasing the incidence of mastitis is also increasing on the other hand. The factors like herd size, agro-climatic conditions, variations in socio-cultural practices, milk marketing literacy level of animal owner, system of feeding and management were implicated in the incidence of subclinical mastitis. Despite several attempts, safe and effective mastitis vaccines that would protect against many mastitis causing organisms are not available. Till date, mastitis control has been based mainly on widespread and unsustainable antibiotic usage to treat the clinically affected animals. The continuous pressure to reduce the antibiotic usage and changing etiology and epidemiology of mastitis in different production systems poses new challenges to develop effective mastitis control programs. In the given situation, it is evident that a critical understanding of the facts and figures of bovine mastitis is essential to evolve research, development and farm level strategies to control mastitis in dairy animals. Recent developments in scientific tools and methods have advanced our understanding of host-pathogen interactions involved in bovine mastitis, mechanistic insight into disease progression, the effect of therapeutic molecules and how the animal responds to different management strategies. This book provides deep insight into different aspects of bovine mastitis (etiology, epidemiology, diagnosis, host-animal-environment interaction, public health issues, therapy and management) with the aim to update the facts and figures on this disease so that proper strategies can be evolved to reduce the severity of mastitis, to increase production and profitability, and to supply of safe and nutritious milk and milk products to the consumers.