Abstract
Bovine respiratory disease (BRD) continues to be a leading cause of economic loss, hampered animal welfare, and intensive antimicrobial use in cattle operations worldwide. Reduction of antimicrobial use is hindered because it is still unclear which clinical signs are best monitored to reliably detect pneumonia. Also, these clinical signs may vary according to age and between breeds. The objective of this cross-sectional study was to identify clinical signs associated with ultrasound-confirmed pneumonia (lung consolidation ≥1 cm depth) pre- and postweaning in different production types (dairy, beef, and veal) and breeds. A total of 956 calves (70% Holstein-Friesian dairy and 30% Belgian Blue beef) from 84 herds were clinically examined using 24 parameters, scored using the Wisconsin and California BRD clinical scoring systems and subjected to thoracic ultrasonography. Of the calves, 42.8% and 19.5% had a lung consolidation ≥1 cm and ≥3 cm, respectively. Cough, both spontaneous and induced, was the only and best-performing clinical sign statistically associated with lung consolidation in all production types. Fever (rectal temperature ≥39.4°C) was the second most promising factor, being significant in beef and veal calves but not in dairy calves. Postweaning, none of the clinical signs studied were statistically associated with pneumonia, with the exception of cough in dairy calves. Spontaneous or induced cough as a single clinical sign outperformed any combination of clinical signs, including the Wisconsin and California respiratory disease scoring systems, but sensitivity remained low. This information can be useful to select appropriate clinical signs for continuous monitoring in precision livestock applications, targeted to a given breed and age. As a cross-sectional measurement, diagnostic accuracy of spontaneous cough (accuracy = 65.1%, sensitivity = 37.4%, specificity = 85.7%) is too low to be used as a criterion to select animals with pneumonia for antimicrobial treatment. At the group level, cough monitoring holds potential as an early warning sign, after which lung ultrasonography should follow.
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