# Ovine lameness in Ireland: a survey-based investigation of farmer reported prevalence, recognition, and treatment of lameness conditions

**Authors:** J. W. Delaney, E. T. Kelly, J. W. Angell, F. P. Campion

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s13620-025-00313-3 · Irish Veterinary Journal · 2025-11-11

## TL;DR

This study surveyed Irish sheep farmers to understand how common lameness is, how well they can identify different types, and what treatments they use.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the prevalence, recognition, and treatment of lameness in Irish sheep flocks based on farmer-reported data.

## Key findings

- Interdigital dermatitis was the most common lameness condition reported by farmers with a median prevalence of 10.0%.
- Antibiotic aerosol was the most frequently used treatment for interdigital dermatitis, while antibiotic injection was most common for footrot and CODD.
- Therapeutic foot trimming was used by 52.9% of farmers for footrot treatment.

## Abstract

Ovine lameness represents a significant production and welfare challenge to farmers and comprises two main categories, infectious and non-infectious lameness. The leading infectious lameness conditions are interdigital dermatitis (ID), footrot (FR) and contagious ovine digital dermatitis (CODD). The predominant types of non-infectious foot conditions include toe granulomas (TG) and shelly hoof (white line disease; SH).

There is a paucity of information available as to how Irish farmers treat infectious foot lesions in sheep. This study aimed to i) Establish farmer-reported prevalence of lameness in Irish sheep flocks, ii) Assess farmers’ ability to identify infectious and non-infectious lameness types, iii) Examine the treatment methods employed by farmers for managing and treating infectious lameness in sheep.

The survey was conducted opportunistically and non-randomly. Three hundred and sixty-three valid responses were gathered. The median overall farm lameness prevalence reported was 6.0% (IQR: 4.0%–10.0%). Respondents reported ID as the most common lameness condition with a median estimated prevalence of 10.0% (IQR: 4.0 – 15.0). Respondents identified 77.9%, 76.6%, 61.7%, 67.3% and 67.0% of ID, FR, CODD, TG and SH lesions correctly, respectively. Where the respective lesion was correctly identified 95.1%, 90.2%, 49.2%, 59.7% and 68.4% reported to have seen ID, FR, CODD, TG and SH lesions, respectively on their farm previously. Antibiotic aerosol was the most frequently utilised treatment for ID (71.3% [95% CI:65.2, 76.8%]) reported by survey respondents. Antibiotic injection was reported by respondents as the most used treatment for FR (72.2% [95% CI: 65.8,78.0%]) and CODD (85.1% [95% CI: 75.8, 91.8%]). Therapeutic foot trimming was practiced by 52.9% (95% CI:46.1,59.6%) of respondents for the treatment of FR.

Interdigital dermatitis (ID) posed the greatest burden to Irish farmers, with a median farm prevalence of 10.0%, while footrot affected 90.2% of flocks (median 4.0%). Contagious ovine digital dermatitis, previously considered rare, was reported in 47% of flocks (median 3%). Farmers’ ability to correctly identify lesions varied from 79.9% for ID to 62.4% for CODD. Therapeutic foot-trimming, remain widely used within Irish flocks and was reported by 52.9% of respondents for the treatment of FR.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** footrot (MONDO:0024935)
- **Species:** Ovis aries (taxon 9940)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** TG (MESH:D006099), white line disease (MESH:D014912), infectious (MESH:D003141), foot conditions (MESH:D005534), lameness (MESH:D007794), ID (MESH:D054739), CODD (MESH:D058066)
- **Species:** Ovis aries (domestic sheep, species) [taxon 9940]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12607030/full.md

## References

2 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12607030/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12607030