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BVD PI Screening Protocol
A screening protocol developed with a consulting or practicing veterinarian will help the cattle producer with a herd at risk for bovine viral diarrhea (BVD) in finding all persistently infected (PI) animals.
BVD PI screening should be part of a program involving biosecurity, vaccination and overall herd health.
Key points:
BVD PI testing should be based on the protocol of the lab and advice of a veterinarian.
Test all calves in the herd before bull turnout to avoid exposure of a PI during breeding.
Cows don't need sampling and testing unless they have a positive PI calf, assuming the calf can be matched to the dam.
The PI animal needs to be eliminated from the herd. Remember, “Once a PI calf, always a PI calf.”
If an animal tests negative for BVD PI status, there's no need to ever retest it.
PI surveillance should include post-mortem exams of as many aborted fetuses and stillborns as possible.
PIs that live to be breeding females horizontally transfer the virus to other herd animals — and will always produce PI calves.
Test new entries:
Home-raised yearling heifers should be tested for BVD PI status prior to breeding. If the heifer was tested as a calf and found negative, there's no need to retest.
Test open heifers before purchase or commingling with the new herd, and the start of breeding season.
Keep all purchased cows with unknown BVD PI status separate from the new herd. Test their calves prior to commingling.
Only use bulls that test BVD PI free.
PI test all calves purchased for grafting.
Test all open cows not sold before breeding.
Cows that have not calved at the time of testing the other calves should be separated. Take samples from their calves before commingling.
Test all cows losing a calf (if a sample wasn't obtained from the calf).
John Paterson, Montana State University-Bozeman; and Bruce Hoffman, DVM, Manhattan, MT.
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