Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Chronic skin infection in cattle treated with long-acting
By Hordofa, Negessa Diriba et al.·Published in Veterinary Medicine and Science·2025·School of Veterinary Medicine Ambo University Ambo Ethiopia·View original on Crossref →
PetCaseFinder translated the abstract of this peer-reviewed paper into plain English so pet owners can read it. We do not publish original research — every detail traces back to the citation above. How we work →
Original publication title: Chronic Form of Dematophilosis Treatment Response With Long‐Acting Oxytetracycline in Cattle: Case Report
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
A 5-year-old bull was brought in with dry skin lesions that had been present for over a year. The veterinarian found scabby patches on the bull's back and belly and diagnosed it with dermatophilosis, a skin infection. The treatment involved cleaning the lesions and giving the bull seven injections of long-acting oxytetracycline over a week. Unfortunately, after five weeks, the skin lesions returned, indicating that the treatment was not effective. Further research is needed to understand how to better treat this condition in cattle.
People also search for: bull skin lesions treatment · dermatophilosis in cattle · oxytetracycline for skin infections in cattle
Abstract
ABSTRACT Dermatophilosis is dermatitis with acute, subacute and chronic courses which is usually exudative and rarely proliferative and can affect cattle, sheep, goats and horses and sometimes in humans. A 5‐year‐old local breed bull was presented to Professor Feseha Gebreab Memorial Veterinary Teaching Hospital of the College of Veterinary Medicine and Agriculture, Addis Ababa University, with main complaints of dry skin lesions which started before one year of presentation. Upon clinical examination, the bull was in good body condition, and there was a dry scabby skin lesion on its dorsum and ventral parts. Impression smear was made from the beneath scabs, and staining was done by Giemsa. The examined smear revealed typical railroad stack arrangements of organisms by the staining. The skin lesion was scrubbed with 10% sodium chloride solution; lesions were removed and disinfected with cetrimide 3% and chlorhexidine 0.3% (Cavlon) solution. Iodine 2% was applied topically for 5 successive days. The bull was treated with seven doses of long‐acting oxytetracycline (20%) deep intramuscular injection at a dose of 20 mg/kg for 7 days. After a treatment course of 5 weeks, the removed crusts re‐emerged again and the disease was not responsive to the given drug. The severity of the lesion might be the cause of disease relapse, and individual animal factors could have influenced the treatment's resistive response and it need further study to determine whether oxytetracycline is beneficial in treating chronic dermatophilosis.
Find similar cases for your pet
PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.
Search related cases →Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1002/vms3.70339