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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
Selling ibr positive cows.
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<blockquote data-quote="Lucky_P" data-source="post: 1249788" data-attributes="member: 12607"><p>So...they were 'sure' of it - or they actually took nasal swabs, blood samples, etc.? </p><p>Sure, with the clinical signs you described, I'd suspect IBR as a possibility... but suspecting it and proving it are two different things. </p><p></p><p>If this was last summer, they've calved out uneventfully, and seem otherwise normal, I'd sell 'em with no concerns, no caveats, and no warnings. just my 2 cents.</p><p></p><p>Disease prevalence is different from one area of the country to another. I go 10 years or more at a time without seeing IBR or getting reports from veterinary practitioners regarding cases suggestive of IBR. I'm sure that in other parts of the country, it's more prevalent. </p><p>Only IBR-associated abortions I've seen in nearly 20 years were induced by use of mlv vaccines in females that had not previously been vaccinated appropriately.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lucky_P, post: 1249788, member: 12607"] So...they were 'sure' of it - or they actually took nasal swabs, blood samples, etc.? Sure, with the clinical signs you described, I'd suspect IBR as a possibility... but suspecting it and proving it are two different things. If this was last summer, they've calved out uneventfully, and seem otherwise normal, I'd sell 'em with no concerns, no caveats, and no warnings. just my 2 cents. Disease prevalence is different from one area of the country to another. I go 10 years or more at a time without seeing IBR or getting reports from veterinary practitioners regarding cases suggestive of IBR. I'm sure that in other parts of the country, it's more prevalent. Only IBR-associated abortions I've seen in nearly 20 years were induced by use of mlv vaccines in females that had not previously been vaccinated appropriately. [/QUOTE]
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Selling ibr positive cows.
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