Abstract:
Heifer mastitis causes significant economic losses to the dairy development sectors and the infection causes
detrimental mammary gland development affecting the subsequent lactation stage, udder health and related culling
hazard. A cross-sectional study was conducted from June 2011 to March 2012 on cross breed heifers in Debre-zeit
and Sebeta towns to estimate the prevalence of heifer mastitis isolate bacteria causing mastitis and test their
antimicrobial susceptibility. One hundred fifty eight heifers were able to include from 149 cooperative smallholder
dairy farms during the study period. From the total of 158 heifers sampled, 46(29.1%) were positive for mastitis
(9.5% clinical and 19.6% subclinical cases). Identification of the bacteria on primary culture was made on the basis
of colony morphology, hemolytic characteristics, Gram stain reaction including shape and arrangements of the
bacteria, catalase and oxidation and fermentation (O-F) tests and further differentiation within the species level
were done by using selective media. The most frequently isolated bacteria from quarter milk samples for clinical
and subclinical mastitis were 7(24.1%) and 22(75.9%) CNS, 7(26.91%) and 19(73.1%) Staphylococcus aureus and
4(22.2%) and 14(77.8%) E.coli respectively. Other bacterial isolates were Streptococcus agalactiae(1(11.1%) and
8(88.9%)), klebsiella pnumonia(3(37.5%) and 5(62.5%)), Bacillus cerus(1(16.7%) and 5(83.3%)), actinomycet
pyogens(1(25%) and 3(75%)), Streptococcus dysagalactiae(0 and 3(100%)), Entroccoccus feacalise(0 and 3(100%)
and Streptococcus uberis(0 and 3(100%) for clinical and subclinical mastitis respectively. The univariable logistic
regression showed that among the risk factors considered, age, heifer status, mastitic milk fed to calves, body
condition scoring, usage of waste disposal and udder hygiene had significant effect on the prevalence of sub-clinical
mastitis. However, after multivariable analysis, only age(OR=2.1;CI,1.5-2.9), mastitic milk fed to
calves(OR=2.3;CI,1.5-3.5), udder hygiene(OR=1.9;CI,1.4-2.5) and usage of waste disposal(OR=2.7;CI,1.6-4.4)
had significant effect. The antimicrobial sensitivity test showed for the majority of bacterial isolates 75-100%
susceptibility pattern. Among all isolates CNS and Streptococcus dysagalactiae were showed 100% susceptibility
for all of the antimicrobials tested, while the remaining species had varying levels of susceptibility. Among isolates
Staphylococcus aureus show relatively lower susceptibility for almost all antimicrobials used. Streptomycin and
Erythromycin was the most effective antibiotic followed by Sulfisoxazole and Ampicillin. The presence of mastitis in
heifer in early age indicates important economic losses. Therefore, awareness creation at the smallholder dairy
farm on the economic significance of heifer mastitis, risk factors that plays vital role in establishment and
flourishment of potential pathogen and use of dry cow therapy before calving will help in reducing mastitis in heifer.
Moreover, further studies on what extent the causative pathogen and the host itself affect the persistence of
intramammary infection during calving and early lactating heifers, and evaluation of other risk factors in depth will
merits the dairy farms.