Factors associated with ovine footrot lesions in Uruguayan flocks: a cross-sectional study
Waldemir Santiago Neto, Ana Crescionini, Ludmila Slimovich, Caroline da Silva Silveira, Sofía Salada, Martín Fraga, Sergio Fierro

TL;DR
This study identifies management factors influencing footrot in Uruguayan sheep flocks, offering insights for targeted prevention strategies.
Contribution
The study provides novel insights into farm-level management practices that influence footrot in Uruguayan sheep.
Findings
Footrot-related lesions occurred in 17.7% of sheep, primarily due to severe footrot.
Breed stock size, formalin footbath, and veterinarian assistance had protective effects against footrot.
Vaccination and control programs were associated with increased footrot risk.
Abstract
Ovine footrot has Dichelobacter nodosus as the primary pathogen, and it is characterized by its infectious and multifactorial nature, such as environmental conditions, management practices, and host susceptibility, leading to variable prevalence and economic impacts across regions. The present study investigated factors associated with footrot scores in individual sheep from a non-probabilistic sample of 60 flocks enrolled by the Uruguayan Wool Secretariat, from which 6,139 sheep had their feet clinically evaluated from 2021 to 2024. PCR was employed to confirm D. nodosus at the farm level, and data on flock management were collected. The occurrence of footrot-related lesions at the animal level was 17.7%, mainly due to severe footrot. Ordinal multivariable mixed models with a random farm effect showed that the intraclass correlation coefficient for farms was 57.2%. Regarding fixed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Behavior and Welfare Studies · Animal Disease Management and Epidemiology · Microbial infections and disease research
