Abstract

Clinical signs of photosensitivity in cattle can occur sporadically and unpredictably. It is believed that cases of photosensitivity may be underreported, causing inaccurate and inflated reports of mortality. Additionally, because secondary photosensitization in grazing cattle occurs with liver damage or dysfunction, photosensitivity can have many potential or associated causes. This case links a previous occurrence of coccidiosis to an outbreak of photosensitivity in grazing Holstein steers. Grazing management staff first observed clinical signs of photosensitivity 17 days after an outbreak of coccidiosis and subsequent turnout to spring pastures. Clinical signs were observed in 25% of the population. The severity of photosensitivity was variable and ranged from blistered skin on the muzzle to sloughing of unpigmented epidermis and thinly haired regions. Severely affected cattle were removed from pasture, housed under shade, monitored for infection, and recovered without treatment. Mild cases remained on pasture and recovered without treatment. Photosensitivity did not reoccur in the cattle that remained on pasture or in mildly affected cattle returned to pasture. Photosensitivity did not appear to be associated with pasture weeds, a specific forage species, or variable or extreme weather conditions that could have resulted in mycotoxin production. The occurrence appears to have been a result of a previous and concurrent coccidiosis outbreak that caused secondary photosensitization through hepatic lipidosis caused by anorexia and dehydration associated with the severe coccidiosis. Although clinical signs appeared suddenly, cattle recovered quickly and without treatment.

Highlights

  • Photosensitivity in cattle causes abnormal lesions, blistering, and peeling of skin, which occur on unpigmented epidermis and thinly haired regions [1]

  • We propose that extreme weight loss caused by the coccidiosis led to hepatic lipidosis, it does not appear that the severity of weight loss was related to the development of photosensitivity

  • Other than removing calves with severe cases from pasture into the shade in confinement, calves were not treated for photosensitivity

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Summary

Introduction

Photosensitivity in cattle causes abnormal lesions, blistering, and peeling of skin, which occur on unpigmented epidermis and thinly haired regions [1]. The severity of photosensitivity can range from mild erythema and oedema to fissuring of the epithelium, exudation, crusting of serum, and necrosis and sloughing of skin [1]. Clinical signs have been seen within 24 h of induced cases [1]. Photosensitivity clinical signs have been reported to be observed within 4 days [2] to several weeks [3].

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