Testicular Degeneration in Bulls

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From the Western Producer

TESTICULAR DEGENERATION IN BULLS

By Roy Lewis DVM

One of the most frustrating conditions to hit our herd sires is testicular degeneration (testicles shrinking up). It often strikes without warning or reason. It causes headaches for both purebred breeders with bulls they have sold and for insurance companies with bulls they have insured.

In this article I will go over some known causes and what to be observant for. Often we cannot prevent this condition however early recognition of warning signs may prevent the economic ramifications it brings.

The scrotum and it's muscular attachments has the ability to expand and contract and in so doing raise and lower the testicles depending on the ambient temperature and body temperature of the bull. The scrotal temperature is normally lower than body temperature and must be maintained at that for normal sperm production. Anything that alters this greatly will affect normal sperm production and could over the long-term lead to testicular degeneration. It is important to note when even a temporary increase in scrotal temperature (say 1o C for 10 days) will affect sperm production for four to five months. Recovery will take a long time, which often as a producer you do not have the luxury of.

Any condition, which causes increased temperature in the scrotal area, must be guarded against. Severe clinical disease, swelling in the area as a result of trauma (stepped on or bunted in the scrotal area), testicular torsion all may result in degeneration over time. Extremely fat bulls have too much insulation in their scrotum raising the internal temperature. Frostbite will initially cause the damage freezing brings but as healing occurs inflammatory processes set up and these can cause local temperatures to rise. Most of these conditions may have been long past and may not have even been recognized before testicular degeneration is picked up at semen evaluation time.

The body also has a unique mechanism when it comes to the testicles. Any situation where sperm mix into the bloodstream causes the equivalent of organ rejection. The bull's body produces antisperm antibodies, which fight sperm production causing the testicles to degenerate. This could happen in any traumatic incident or with a testicular torsion. If surgery is necessary to remove a damaged testicle: if precautions are not taken the remaining testicle could degenerate as a result of either inflammation or sperm getting into the bulls blood supply.

There is a huge misconception out there that treating a bull with antibiotics will hurt sperm production. It is far, far worse to leave a medical condition untreated running the risk of increased body temperature than it is to quickly treat the condition. Having said that treatment with anabolic steroids or implanting can have devastating effects on the testicles because of alterations in hormone production.

Degeneration can happen to any bull at any stage in his life. That's why it's important to semen evaluate close to the breeding season in case anything has gone undetected over the winter. Testicles with degeneration will feel a lot softer and will measure much smaller than they did before. Sometimes only one testicle will degenerate such as from a bunt to only one side of the scrotum. If the other testicle is fully functional you will even see it hypertrophy (get bigger) and it may produce more sperm to compensate for the loss of the other testicle. These bulls will have somewhat reduced capacity but still may be fertile enough to use.

The most obvious clinical signs of degeneration are of course shriveled testicles and the scrotal hair will often grow longer. If you suspect degeneration or if the testicles are markedly swollen or frostbitten it is wise to have a semen evaluation performed. As mentioned before regeneration can take place but it is a rarer event. Plus this may take several months and depending on the season of the year you may not be able to afford the time. Anytime bulls are fighting excessively or you notice even slightly swollen testicles document it especially if the bull is insured. The insurance companies will need some form of documentation because testicular degeneration is such a gray area when it comes to insurance. Primarily because we often don't know what the initiating cause is.

Spontaneous degeneration can occur at anytime in a bull's life but is more common in older age (> 5 years). That is why it is imperative to semen test all older bulls yearly. If you have a past history of scrotal size you can pick up degeneration in the early stages and eliminate the bull. It is not uncommon for scrotal size to vary up to 2cm depending on fat cover and season of year. An experienced veterinarian will pick up the palpable softness of the testicles along with the multitude of sperm defects, which accompany degenerating testicles.

The bull's testicles are one of the most important anatomical organs when it comes to breeding ability and fertility always keep a close eye on this investment. Diligent observation and subsequent testing can eliminate potential disasters in your breeding program when a bull degenerates.
 
Good article.
Just curious, How many of you out there semen check your bulls yearly?

I'm just curious because our calving season is not going as usuall this year. We sold a bull that we think may have gone "bad". Normally we have 20-25 calves in the month of March, this year, we have 9 so far. We had 2 bulls with the cows last June and the one (aggressive) seemed more intent on pushing the other (breeder) off the cows, than breeding some other cow. We are hoping that is the reason we have only got 9 so far. We took the "aggressive" bull out about July 1, which means if the "breeder" did his job after that, we should start seeing more calves any time. We are keeping our fingers crossed that the "breeder" bull just couldn't do his job with the aggressive bull pushing on him all the time, and not that the breeder bull was "bad". 9 calves out of a possible 35 or so, isn't too good of an average. :cry:
 
My brother had a bull get a fever last fall. The change in him has been striking. The hair on his head used to be coarse and curly and now looks alot more like he has bangs. His tail has thinned out. He's lost alot of neck muscle as well. I read a book awhile back that stated that all those things are indicators of loss of fertility.
I usually trust that if my bull passes the semen test the first year I test him that unless I see some big change in the way he looks, he will probably stay fertile.
 
I semen check mine yearly.
El_Putzo":29ikvilh said:
Good article.
Just curious, How many of you out there semen check your bulls yearly?

I'm just curious because our calving season is not going as usuall this year. We sold a bull that we think may have gone "bad". Normally we have 20-25 calves in the month of March, this year, we have 9 so far. We had 2 bulls with the cows last June and the one (aggressive) seemed more intent on pushing the other (breeder) off the cows, than breeding some other cow. We are hoping that is the reason we have only got 9 so far. We took the "aggressive" bull out about July 1, which means if the "breeder" did his job after that, we should start seeing more calves any time. We are keeping our fingers crossed that the "breeder" bull just couldn't do his job with the aggressive bull pushing on him all the time, and not that the breeder bull was "bad". 9 calves out of a possible 35 or so, isn't too good of an average. :cry:
 
We've never had to pay to check one, what does it cost? Don't get me wrong, all of the bulls we buy get tested, but the seller has always paid for that. Also, we've never sold a bull unless it was to slaughter. Just curious so I know for the future.
 
LOL

DO not think of hauling in my part of the world. There is not one veterinarian that has on site handling equipment.

We were used to taking our cattle to the veterinarian for treatment if necessary when living in the west.

We had a cow get fairly sick and could not get a large animal veterinarian to come out to the farm. My wife - nice as pie says, "OK, when can we bring her in to be looked at?"

Long pause - the receptionist says, "We are located in the middle of the Mall. I don't think you should do that. The waiting room is too small!"

Wife politely says ok and "thanks we'll call someone else". Hangs up the phone and nearly collapses in laughter.

Needless to say we deal somewhere else now.

Bez
 
I've related this story before, so some may have read it.
When we moved to NY from Kansas, my daughter had a bull calf that she kept "in tact" so that she could show cow/calf pair. After show season, we wanted him castrated. I called a vet's office that had spoke at one of the 4-H meetings. I explained to the gal that we had an 8 month old beef bull calf that needed castrating & asked when I could bring him in. She set up a time, & my daughter & I loaded him into our stockrack on the pickup. We drove to the vet's office. I pulled in - looked around - drove around back - no loading ramp??? I got out & went into the office and asked the gal where I was supposed to unload the calf for castration in their facilities. The gal had no idea what I was talking about. They thought I had a little calf (ours was about 800#). The vet ended up giving him RomPom (sp?) and daughter & I held him up against the side of the stockrack. Cost my daughter about $125. We deffinately learned how to do our own after that.

No vets have facilities. Cornell Univ Vet does, but that's the only one I know of. In Kansas, each vet had work facilities, AND portable work facilities that they drug out to your farm & set up for fall work-up.
Totally different world out here. This is the 3rd largest dairy state, so we have LOTS of large animal vets, but they are used to going to the farm & treating everything in stantions. We are fortunate that we have so many GOOD large animal vets, by what I read on the posts. But, they don't like to take on BEEF customers, because mose beef producers out here are "backyard - hobby" farms and they don't have facilities. My vets actually prefer working with my cattle in our work chute. Say they don't move around like the dairy cows in stantions.
 

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