fbpx
Sign up now!
Don't show this again
Download the report!Continue to Site >
or wait 7 secs

Thank you for confirming your subscription!

(And remember, if ever you want to change your email preferences or unsubscribe, just click on the links at the bottom of any email.)

We’re glad you’re enjoying Pig Health Today.
Access is free but you’ll need to register to view more content.
Already registered? Sign In
Tap to download the app
X
Share
X

REPORTS

Collect articles and features into your own report to read later, print or share with others

Create a New Report

Favorites

Read Later

Create a new report

Report title (required) Brief description (optional)
CREATE
X
NEXT
PORK POULTRY
follow us


You must be logged in to edit your profile.

Favorites Read Later My Reports PHT Special Reports
Pig Health Today is equipped with some amazing (and free) tools for organizing and sharing content, as well as creating your own magazines and special reports. To access them, please register today.
Sponsored by Zoetis

Pig Health Today | Sponsored by Zoetis

.

Moving parts: Integrated, holistic approach needed for effective mycoplasma control

Renewed interest in Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae (M. hyo) and its impact on herd health and performance has prompted producers and veterinarians to re-evaluate control strategies for the costly bacterial disease.

David Baumert, DVM, senior technical services veterinarian for Zoetis, outlined five elements needed for more successful M. hyo-control programs.

1. Partnership with producers

Disease control programs can’t be completed in a vacuum, Baumert said. Producers need to know they have partners, including their herd veterinarian and technical service veterinarians at animal health companies, as they work to develop effective control programs.

“When producers know they have support, they find energy and resources, and as a result, these programs generally work. When the programs don’t work, veterinarians need to be the people providing the next steps of the solution — reviewing the process and finding out what can be changed or modified,” Baumert said. “Good communication, transparency and recordkeeping are key.”

2. Establish herd status

“A ‘decision tree’ is used during the risk-assessment phase to determine whether a herd is more suited for a relatively simple M. hyo-control program or better suited for a more intensive, true Mycoplasma-elimination program,” Baumert said.

He added that sometimes the risk assessment is easy. A producer complains about a dry, hacking cough in the finisher, along with morbidity, mortality and average-daily-gain losses. Other times, Baumert said, it may be necessary to ask questions to understand more about the operation:

  • Are they currently using a vaccine or bacterin for hyo?
  • Did they miss a treatment in a group of pigs?
  • What protocols are in place to protect pigs at the present time?
  • Are there management practices that need to be incorporated?
  • Are they in a pig-dense area?
  • Are they interested in vaccine or pig-management protocols in order to use antibiotics more judiciously?

Answering these questions will help determine the future actions needed.

3. Do the diagnostic work

After the presumptive diagnosis, Baumert said specific diagnostics, including polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing along with tissue tests and serology, are needed. He pointed out that detailed diagnostic requirements for health-status categories take into account the expected prevalence of M. hyoin the population, as well as the sensitivity of the sampling technique and diagnostic tests. Following a control or an elimination program, testing should be repeated to determine the effectiveness of the intervention, regardless of which program is used.

4. Apply risk-management protocols

“Not every solution is good for every customer,” Baumert said. He stressed the need to work as a team with herd veterinarians and producers to find tailored interventions for given situations.

Baumert noted that the pork industry has many tools available for managing M. hyo, including feed medications, injectable antibiotics and vaccines.

“Rather than shoot in the dark, it’s best to take an integrated, holistic approach that involves all the tools at your disposal,” he said. “Again, it’s a matter of all parties working together to determine the action plan.”

That includes biosecurity. Adequate biosecurity is critical — not only to mitigate or eliminate these risk factors but also to understand risk factors that can help determine the most realistic and sustainable control strategy. He listed these key biosecurity factors critical to M. hyo control:

  • Gilt source: “If the gilts coming in next month and 6 months from now are infected with Mycoplasma, there’s no value in cleaning Mycoplasma out of the sow herd,” he said. “The gilts will redeliver it.”
  • Farm geography: “We need to know if this farm is located in a geography in which we can reasonably expect it to stay Mycoplasma-negative for 2 to 3 years,” Baumert said. “The cost of a full, intensive, premium Mycoplasma-elimination program will cost approximately the same as the additional gain you make from all the Mycoplasma-negative healthy pigs for about a year.” Most production companies with which he’s worked are looking for a two- or three-fold return on investment. If a farm is able to do a full elimination and can get a year’s worth of Mycoplasma-negative pigs, that producer has made his money back, Baumert said.
  • Pig flow: Veterinarians should ask if pigs from the sow farm will be placed in a wean-to-finish site where they are mixed only with other Mycoplasma-negative pigs. That’s a critical point, because if the pigs from a farm that has gone through an elimination program are put into the same wean-to-finish, continuous-flow site as Mycoplasma-infected pigs, “we haven’t really accomplished much,” Baumert said.

5. Implement a program

Producers and veterinarians can now begin developing a plan that’s best for the farm. Whether the team has chosen a control program or a potential elimination program, each has a timeline to follow, Baumert said, and the management team must commit to maintaining it.

Medication can be used for control, treatment, or disease elimination, and all these steps should be carried out with proper timing and coordination. The long-term goal is to eliminate M. hyo shedding from mother to piglet and reduce the number of positive piglets at weaning.

Follow-up is important

The roadmap basically goes full-circle at this point, Baumert said, because communication and cooperation with farm partners ensures a successful program.

“The goal is to have pigs marketing in a healthier, more productive fashion, in terms of Mycoplasma disease, than they were prior to implementing a program” Baumert said. “These programs generally work, but if one doesn’t, we need to be the people on top of providing the next steps of the solution by reviewing the process and finding out what we can change or modify.”

 

Editor’s Note: For a free download of “A Contemporary Review of Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae Control Strategies,” click here.

 

 

 

 

PRK-00269

Share It
There’s recently been a re-evaluation of control strategies for the costly pathogen Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae (M. hyo). Veterinarian David Baumert of Zoetis outlines 5 elements needed for success.

Click an icon to share this information with your industry contacts.



Posted on March 30, 2020

tags: , , ,
RELATED NEWS
  • Zoetis releases update of M. Hyo Manual

    Zoetis has released an update of the comprehensive manual, “A Contemporary Review of Mycoplasma Hyopneumoniae Control Strategies,” with 14 articles developed by swine-disease experts specializing in this pathogen.

  • Start with the gilt-development unit for Mhp elimination

    US pig producers have made a big push to eliminate Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae (Mhp) from their herds as a way to capture more value in finishing pigs.

  • M. hyo elimination or control: ‘We have the tools to succeed’

    Hog farmers and veterinarians no longer have to accept the poorer performance that results from M. hyo infection. Whether the decision is to control or eliminate M. hyo, there are numerous tools available, and the payoff is real.

  • Don’t lose sight of M. hyo while battling other swine pathogens

    TOOLBOX, Issue 1: An interview with Lucina Galina Pantoja, DVM, PhD, Director, Swine Technical Services, Zoetis 




You must be logged in to edit your profile.

Google Translate is provided on this website as a reference tool. However, Poultry Health Today and its sponsor and affiliates do not guarantee in any way the accuracy of the translated content and are not responsible for any event resulting from the use of the translation provided by Google. By choosing a language other than English from the Google Translate menu, the user agrees to withhold all liability and/or damage that may occur to the user by depending on or using the translation by Google.