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"Trich" Biosecurity

Mt Department of Livestock Trichomoniasis Order 1/07/09

Bovine Trichomoniasis (commonly called "Trich") can be an important cause of economic loss in cattle operations that use natural service. This disease is caused by a protozoan organism called Trichomonas foetus. This organism lives in the internal sheath and prepuce of the bull. In cows this organism colonizes in the internal reproductive tract.

Trich is a venereal disease of cattle. It is transmitted from cow to cow by a bull during breeding. Bulls show no clinical signs. Cows can commonly clear the infection within a few months; however, infection in bulls over 4 years of age is usually permanent and is the main source of transmission from one breeding season to another. The disease is self-limiting in cows, as opposed to bulls, that will be permanently infected. After several heat cycles, most cows and heifers clear the infection, but this may take months.

The most common signs in an infected herd are related to infertility. The cows will breed and settle, but then they experience early embryonic death of the fertilized embryo. About 30 to 40 days later the cow will once again come back into heat and breed. This may go on for 2 to 4 cycles until the cow clears the infection and settles for good, staying pregnant to deliver a full term live calf. While this whole process is happening the cows may have a calving date that is 3 to 6 months late.

Ranchers may notice the following signs when "Trich" infects a herd:

Testing for Tritrichomonas foetus is usually done on breeding bulls by performing a preputial wash and inoculating the sample into special culture media. If one bull is found positive, you should assume that the whole herd is exposed.

Studies of positive bulls have shown that this culture method will miss about 10 to 20 percent of infected bulls if the test is performed only once. So, if no infected bull is found on the basis of one culture of all the bulls in the herd, then we can be 80-90% sure that the herd is "clean."

Again, it is important that producers visit with their veterinarian. There are vaccines available. The vaccines help cows/heifers to clear the infection in a matter of weeks (versus months in unvaccinated cows). In most cases, it does not prevent infection. The vaccine does not prevent infection or reduce the disease in bulls. There is no approved treatment for infected bulls.

How to prevent the disease in your herd?

If one of your bulls is positive for trichomoniasis, it is recommended to cull all bulls and vaccinate all females twice, one month apart. If you want to keep your bulls, you can vaccinate all females annually, but it would be better to cull all bulls and open cows before next season.

An alternative, if you don't want to cull all bulls, is to sample them at least three times at weekly intervals. With three negative tests, we will be 99% confident that a bull is negative.

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Montana Beef Quality Assurance,
2116 Broadwater Ave., Suite 307/11
Billings, MT 59102,
406-896-9068,
cpeck@montana.edu

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Montana Beef Network,
119 Linfield Hall
Bozeman, MT 59718,
406-994-4323,
mharbac@montana.edu