Agreement among bacteriological findings, vaginal discharges, and endometrial cytology for endometritis detection in postpartum beef cows

This study aims to demonstrate the relationship among vaginal discharges, bacteriological contamination, and endometrial cytology during 20–30 days postpartum in beef cows. A total of 82 beef cows, aged 3 years to 7 years and at 20–30 days post-calving, were enrolled in this study. All the cows were...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mohammed, Salah Noori, Degu, Nurhusien Yimer, Haron, Abdul Wahid, Yusoff, Rosnina, Bejo, Siti khairani, Omar, M. A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: College of Food and Agriculture, United Arab Emirates University 2017
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/60792/1/Agreement%20among%20bacteriological%20findings%2C%20vaginal%20discharges%2C%20and%20endometrial%20cytology%20for%20endometritis%20detection%20in%20postpartum%20beef%20cows.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/60792/
https://www.ejfa.me/index.php/journal/article/view/1207
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Summary:This study aims to demonstrate the relationship among vaginal discharges, bacteriological contamination, and endometrial cytology during 20–30 days postpartum in beef cows. A total of 82 beef cows, aged 3 years to 7 years and at 20–30 days post-calving, were enrolled in this study. All the cows were checked by transrectal palpation, ultrasound, and vaginal discharge collection. Endometrial cytology and bacteriological samples were then collected using a cytobrush technique. Nine of 82 beef cows (10.97%) had abnormal vaginal discharges and clinical endometritis (CE), and nine of 73 clinically healthy cows (12.32%) had subclinical endometritis (SCE). The agreement among endometrial examination, polymorphonuclear neutrophil percentage (PMN %), and vaginal discharge score (0–3) was moderate (k = 0.48, p < 0.01), whereas that between vaginal discharge score (0–3) and bacteriological finding was poor (k = 0.032, p = 0.51). The agreement between bacterial finding and PMN % was also poor (k = 0.15, p = 0.02). Escherichia coli was the most common bacteria isolated from healthy (14.6 %), CE (38.8 %), and SCE (42.8 %) cows. Moreover, E. coli was the major bacteriological risk factor for SCE occurrence. E. coli and Staphylococcus aureus were the most common risk factors for the occurrence of CE. The reproductive performance of beef cows was insignificantly affected by CE and SCE.