|
Bovine Veterinarian MagazineBovine Veterinarian is the only business publication specifically targeted to veterinarians and nutritionists who devote a significant amount of their time to bovine practice. It focuses on providing leading-edge information to help them improve the marketing of their skills to beef and dairy producer clients. |
Bovine Veterinarian MagazineBovine Veterinarian is the only business publication specifically targeted to veterinarians and nutritionists who devote a significant amount of their time to bovine practice. It focuses on providing leading-edge information to help them improve the marketing of their skills to beef and dairy producer clients.
|
Differentiate autolysis from tissue changes
Bovine Vet news source | February 24, 2011
- Clinical mastitis video available
- HSUS ads deceive 90% of donors
- NCBA supports USDA proposed comprehensive BSE rule
- Real-world research

- Calif. TV station investigates 'what’s in your milk'
- Handle arrival cattle with care

- Thank Domino’s; order a pizza
- Managing young bulls
- Take her higher
- Examining cattle at a distance
- Innate immunity in the bovine
- Examining cattle at a distance
- AVC takes on Washington
- Managing young bulls
- Managing calf surges
- Simmons named NCBA’s chief veterinarian
- Salmonella in beef cattle
- BVDV survival on fomites
- DAMN-IT -- why did that cow die?
- Semen quality: A picture is worth a thousand words
Postmortems are routinely done on the feedlot. However, in order guard against misdiagnosis, it’s important to understand the process of autolysis and how it can change tissues over time. There is always a challenge of differentiating autolysis from a real lesion.
Autolysis starts as soon as the animal dies. Bruce W. Brodersen, DVM, PhD, University of Nebraska-Lincoln says due to the microbial flora, the gastrointestinal tract is the quickest to undergo autolysis. “Within a matter of minutes, autolysis begins and within a few hours, epithelial cells will have sloughed off the mucosa,” he says. “Sloughing begins at the tips of villi within minutes after death and proceeds toward the mucosal crypts. Gravitation of blood to dependent areas begins within minutes and can give the appearance of congestion and may be misinterpreted as inflammation. This is a common cause of a misdiagnosis of enteritis.”
Speaking at the 2011 Annual Western Veterinary Conference, Brodersen says gravitation of blood to other organs such as lungs, liver, kidney, and spleen is common and should be taken into consideration when observing changes in color. “Odd or peculiar color patterns can also be the result of blood pooling or blood being displaced due to pressure by adjacent structures or organs,” he explains. “For example, as the rumen distends due to gas production post mortem, blood may be squeezed out of surrounding organs, leaving a pale color.”
In more advanced stages of autolysis, hemolysis leaves free hemoglobin to diffuse into adjacent tissues. This results in a rather monochromatic red color of all the tissues. This is hemoglobin imbibition and the best example is seen in aborted fetuses which have been expelled several days after death in utero. Other changes occur as a result of endogenous enzymes released from dead cells and from bacteria. “Saprophytic bacteria spread rapidly and will complicate isolation of pure cultures of bacterial pathogens,” Brodersen adds. “Histologic examination of autolytic tissues often reveals numerous large bacilli randomly and evenly disseminated throughout the sections.”
|
© Copyright 2012
Vance Publishing Corporation All rights reserved.
|
BOVINE VETERINARIAN
Current Issue About Us Contact Us Advertise |
OUR COMMUNITIES
Drovers CattleNetwork Dairy Herd Network Pork Network Ag Professional Vance Publishing |
VANCE PUBLISHING
List Rentals Terms of Use Privacy Policy Site map
|



Comments (0)
Leave a comment