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Rickets in yearling steers wintered on a swede (Brassica napus) crop
Authors: Cook TG, Thompson KGPublication: New Zealand Veterinary Journal, Volume 35, Issue 1-2, pp 11-13, Jan 1987
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
Animal type: Cattle, Livestock, Production animal, Ruminant
Subject Terms: Skeletal/bone/cartilage, Pasture/crop, Locomotor, Minerals/elememts, Nutrition/metabolism, Disease/defect, Toxicology, Pest/pesticides
Article class: Clinical Communication
Abstract: Rickets was diagnosed in a group of 80 yearling Angus steers wintered for three months on a crop of swedes (Brassica napus) in the Kimbolton area. Growth rate was poor and several steers developed lameness during the final three weeks on the crop. Five animals were euthanased after developing bone fractures. Necropsy of two animals revealed soft ribs, enlarged costochondral junctions and irregularly thickened growth plates in long bones. Histologically there were islands of hypertrophic cartilage within metaphyses and disruption of metaphyseal trabeculae. Thickened, irregular, trabeculae were sometimes lined by wide osteoid seams. Phosphorus deficiency was considered to be the most likely aetiology of the osteodystrophy. The dry matter content of the swedes was only six percent, and in order to satisfy their phosphorus requirements each steer would have had to ingest approximately 330 kg of swedes per day. Rickets is an uncommon disease of grazing animals in New Zealand and to our knowledge this is the first report of its occurrence in cattle.
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