Dr. Mesele veterinary clinic and drug shop

Dr. Mesele veterinary clinic and drug shop This veterinary service is found in Oromia region (Ethiopia) and established in 2008E.C to provide

24/12/2022

Looking for employees that can work @ clinic
Qualifications: DVM,degree or diploma on animal heath and having coc level 4
Required: 1
Experience: good experience @ clinic
Salary: negotaion and benefits
Language: best if able to speak afaan oromo
S*x: better if male
Place : around addis Ababa
Contact; 0912719043

01/01/2022
29/12/2021

Pneumonic pasteurellosis

It's is frequently caused by Mannheimia haemolytica serovar 1 biotype A, sometimes by P. multocida or Histophilus somni, which are all normal inhabitants of the upper respiratory tract. Often pasteurellosis is secondary to respiratory viral infections.

1.Causes

While it has now been accepted that Pasteurella spp. and Mannheimia spp. are the primary cause of pneumonic pasteurellosis and Spread of these organisms by direct contact, or by ingestion of feed and water contaminated by nasal and oral discharge from infected cattle causes the disease

Nevertheless, viral infections and stress (travel, transport, new environment, mixing with new animals etc.) are important factors that predispose calves to the disease.

2.Clinical Signs

- Depression.

- Fever.

- Nasal discharge.

- Moist cough.

- Rapid, shallow breathing.

3.Treatment

Most Pasteurella isolates are susceptible to oral antimicrobials such as amoxicillin, amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, minocycline, fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin, levofloxacin, moxifloxacin), and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.

4.Prevention

The best means of preventing serious Pasteurella skin and soft tissue infections is the possible use of antibiotic prophylaxis for certain high-risk animal bites and scratches. The routine use of antimicrobial treatment as prophylaxis for animal bite wounds is controversial.

26/12/2021

Calf pneumonia:

1.Cause

• Calf pneumonia is a major problem in dairy and beef herds. It is a multifactorial disease, and the most common post-mortem diagnosis in calves between one to five months of age.

Infectious agents involved include Mannheimia haemolytica, Haemophilus somnus, Infectious Bovine Rhinotracheitis (IBR), bovine Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) and Parainfluenza III Virus (PI3), along with many other bacteria and mycoplasma species and viruses.

Environmental factors include low environmental temperatures and high humidity and poor ventilation and also direct draughts onto calves themselves. The relationship between season and outbreaks may also be related to management practices including calving pattern and mixing of different ages of calves.

There are two types of the disease, acute and chronic.

2.Symptoms

Dull and depressed
High temperature
Raised breathing due to lung damage
Nasal discharge
Coughing
Reduced food intake
Chronic pneumonia is more gradual in onset with no distinct ill phase and the cow may appear to still eat well but may have a slight nasal discharge, sometimes with an increased respiratory rate and cough.

Both forms of the respiratory disease cause production losses as there is a reduction in liveweight gain and there may be deaths in the acute syndrome.

3.Treatment

Antibiotics, anti-inflammatories or anthelmintics can be prescribed for treatment.

4.Prevention

It can be difficult to control pneumonia when calves are placed in communal pens. Improved husbandry, ventilation and good nursing care can all reduce risks of pneumonia, as well as ensuring that young animals receive appropriate amounts of colostrum within the first 24 hours of birth.

Colostrum: All calves must have one gallon of colostrum within four to six hours of birth to receive adequate immunity. Calves that are not given enough antibodies at birth are at increased risk for pneumonia and scours throughout the entire growing period.

The most important step in any calf health-management programme is a successful colostrum-management programme.

Ventilation: Often if ammonia can be smelled it is a sign of poor ventilation.

Nutrition: Feeding calves inadequately will reduce calf growth and their immune system response.

•Vaccination: Vaccines are available to reduce risk of infection, however they must be used alongside an effective management programme.

06/12/2021

Blackleg Disease:

Blackleg, black quarter, quarter evil, or quarter ill (Latin: gangraena emphysematosa) is an infectious bacterial disease most commonly caused by Clostridium chauvoei, a Gram-positive bacterial species.

It is seen in livestock all over the world, usually affecting cattle, sheep, and goats. It has been seen occasionally in farmed bison and deer.

The acute nature of the disease makes successful treatment difficult, and the efficacy of the commonly used vaccine is disputed.

Susceptibility:

Most losses due to blackleg occur when the cattle are between the ages of six months and two years, although it can occur when they are as young as two months.

Typically, cattle that have a high feed intake and are well-conditioned tend to be the most susceptible to blackleg.

Causative agent:

Blackleg is caused by infection with Clostridium bacteria.
The most common causative agent is
▪C.chauvoei, but the disease can also be caused by
▪C. septicum,
▪C. sordelli, and
▪C. novyi

Clinical presentations:

When infection begins, the animal may develop a fever, and the affected limb can feel hot to the touch. The limb usually swells significantly, and the animal can develop lameness on the affected leg.

Crepitation (the sensation of air under the skin) can be noticed in many infections, as the area seems to crackle under pressure.

During a necropsy, a diagnosis is usually made very quickly, as the affected muscle is usually mottled with black patches, which are dead tissue killed by the toxins the bacteria release when they infect live tissue.

Vaccination and prevention:

The use of a seven-way clostridial vaccination is the most common and cost effective preventative measure taken against blackleg, but its efficacy is disputed.

Burning the upper layer of soil to eradicate left-over spores is the best way to stop the spread of blackleg from diseased cattle.

Diseased cattle should be isolated. Treatment is generally unrewarding due to the rapid progression of the disease, but penicillin is the drug of choice for treatment. Treatment is only effective in the early stages and as a control measure.

26/11/2021

Proper use of veterinary drugs:

In order to keep livestock healthy it is very important to observe strict adherence to recommended treatment, the highest percentage of which should be done by a trained veterinary personnel and a few can be done by experienced farmers.

Vaccines are active or inactivated disease organisms used to boost immunity of the livestock from specific diseases. They have played a major role in eradicating some of the most dangerous diseases both in man and livestock such as smallpox in man and Rinderpest in animals.

Application of vaccines is a cheap way of protecting your whole flock against devastating diseases, such as Newcaste disease, which cannot be treated and can kill all the chicken in an entire village.

Another example of a deadly disease which can kill all your goats and half of your sheep is Goat Plague or Pest of small ruminants (PPR); there is no treatment against PPR but it can be prevented by vaccination.

Keeping up to date on which vaccinations are important for success of livestock in your area is a very important management tool.

Vaccines need to be kept constantly chilled in a fridge or frozen (depending on manufacturers instructions), as they deteriorate rapidly and loose efficacy within hours when exposed to warm temperature.

New, so called 'thermostable', vaccines are becoming available, which are more resistant to warm temperatures and can be kept for days (sometimes weeks) without cooling or freezing.

Once a vaccine vial has been opened the whole contents should be used quickly. Unused vaccine remaining in the open vial cannot be kept for later use.

It is advisable for several farmers to team up and have their animals vaccinated together on the same day. In this way they will share the costs for buying the vaccine, make full use of the vaccine vial contents and the vaccination becomes cheaper.

Vaccines should be handled and administered by trained veterinary personnel. Most often you will have to rely on the local veterinarian for vaccinating your animals. Chicken vaccination by eye-drop against Newcastle disease can be administered by trained farmers.

Veterinary drugs contain substances, which are potentially toxic and harmful to humans. After giving a drug to an animal these substances remain in the animals' body for some time until they have been completely excreted.

While these toxic substances remain in the body they can be found in the muscle (meat) and also in the udder (milk). A person consuming meat or milk from an animal that still has drug substances in its body will ingest harmful and toxic substances.

To prevent this from happening drug manufacturers provide a withdrawal period for each drug. The withdrawal period is the time until all toxic and harmful substances have been cleared from the body (incl. from meat and milk) of the treated animal.

If more than one injection has been given the withdrawal period begins after the last treatment. Before the withdrawal period is over, milk from the treated animal must not be consumed and the animal can also not be slaughtered for meat. For meat the withdrawal period may be longer than for milk.

The dosage for a drug provided by the manufacturer ensures that the amount of the drug in the body of the treated animal is high enough to kill all bacteria or parasites causing disease.

Because drugs spread to all parts of the body large heavy animals need more of the drug than light small animals. When administering less than the recommended dose the strength of the drug inside the body is low and kills none or only some of the bacteria/parasites.

This is called underdosing - giving too little of the drug. The result of underdosing is either no cure, or an incomplete cure where the animal first improves but then relapses. To make matters worse, the remaining bacteria/parasites learn how to survive.

10/11/2021

Looking for employees that can work @ clinic
Qualifications: diploma on animal heath and having coc level 4
Required: 1
Experience: good experience @ clinic
Salary: negotaion and benefits
Language: best if able to speak afaan oromo
S*x: better if male
Place : around addis Ababa
Contact; 0912719043

27/09/2021

Warts (Skin Tumours):

All animals can get skin tumours. Humans are not affected by skin tumours from animals. Some viruses e.g. the papilloma virus, may cause skin tumours.

There are two types of skin tumours:
1️⃣benign (warts) and
2️⃣malignant (skin cancer).

Benign tumours are not life-threatening, do not spread to other areas of the body and either regress or are amenable to treatment and generally grow slowly.

Malignant tumours can be life-threatening, grow quickly, can spread to other organs or tissues and may be difficult to treat.

In cattle, warts

commonly are found on the
1️⃣head,
2️⃣neck and
3️⃣shoulders, and occasionally on the
4️⃣back and
5️⃣abdomen. One form appears on the teats in older animals. Warts appear about 2 months after exposure to the causal virus and may last for up to or longer than a year.
Apart from warts, the other most common skin tumour found in cattle is the Squamous Cell Carcinoma.

This is a malignant tumour most commonly seen affecting the eye, the v***a or, less commonly, the back, of light skinned European breeds. It grows quickly, does not disappear but grows larger, smells, and requires urgent veterinary attention. If one of these is suspected do not wait, but call a vet. It will not go away

Mode of spread of Warts:

Spread is generally by direct contact with infected animals. Papillomatosis may become a herd problem when a large group of young susceptible cattle become infected. Most of these warts look like a cauliflower.

Another type, which is flatter with a warty surface, may involve the venereal regions, where they can cause pain, disfigurement, infection of the p***s of young bulls and difficulty in calving when the vaginal mucosa of heifers is affected.

Immunity after recovery is solid and persists for at least 2 years. The lack of susceptibility of adults to natural infection is thought to be due to immunity acquired by apparent or unapparent infection when young.

Signs of Skin Tumours:

Hard lumps on the skin that are not hot are often tumours. These lumps may grow slowly, in which case they may be benign. If they grow fast they are probably malignant. Sometimes the skin over a tumour is injured and the lump has open sores on it. If this is the case the tumour is most probably malignant. It is better to get a professional to examine it early than to wait until it is too late to do anything about it.

Horses, mules and donkeys etc:

sometimes get skin tumours called Sarcoids.
A virus, probably the bovine papilloma virus, is suspected. They can be transmitted by direct or indirect contact or by insects. They can grow anywhere on the body but the base of the ear, on the p***s, around the eyes and low on the legs are favoured sites. They do not normally spread through the body but they often grow back if they are surgically removed.

Camels:

about a year old can get small skin tumours around the lips and nose. Older camels sometimes get tumours, especially on the teats. The tumors disappear on their own after a few months.

Prevention - Control - Treatment:

1️⃣There is no known treatment for most tumours. Some tumours do not spread to other parts of the body (these are the benign tumours). Skilled veterinarians sometimes remove benign tumours. Some tumours spread to other parts of the body (these are the malignant tumours). It is not worth operating to remove these because they come back in other parts of the body.

2️⃣Infectious papillomatosis disappears on its own, although the duration of warts varies considerably. A variety of treatments has been advocated without agreement on efficacy.

Surgical removal by a vet is recommended if the warts are sufficiently objectionable. However, because surgery in the early growing stage of warts may lead to recurrence and stimulation of growth they should be removed when near their maximum size.

3️⃣Affected animals may be isolated from others likely to be infected, but with the long incubation period many are likely to have been exposed before the problem is recognized.

4️⃣Vaccines are of some value for prevention but are of little value in treating cattle that already have lesions. Because wart viruses are mostly species specific there is no merit in using a vaccine derived from one species in another.

5️⃣When the disease is a herd problem it can be controlled by vaccination with a suspension of ground up wart tissue in which the virus has been killed by formalin. An autogenous vaccine i.e. one derived from animals in the affected herd, may be more effective than a commercial one.

6️⃣The best action is to do nothing yourself, but call a veterinarian to assess the problem. Trying to treat a tumour without knowing its type may lead to disaster! Leave well alone and call a vet

21/09/2021
09/09/2021

"A vet who never follows biosecurity guidelines is a vector."

The cheapest and most-effective method of disease control is through implementing biosecurity.

ensures that the health and well being of your birds are protected hence improving the immunity and performance of your flock.

Biosecurity is a management practice designed to prevent entry of diseases into a farm, and limit spread. It is an essential element to a good animal husbandry process.

It is important that every poultry farmer checks if their biosecurity plans are strong enough to keep out diseases.

Infectious diseases are introduced on farms through:

1.Introducing diseased or carrier birds. (from infected parent stock, buying old birds from other farmers etc)

2.Visitors, suppliers, vets and farmers clothing, shoes and vehicles.

3.Poor disposal of dead birds’ carcasses, Feathers and litter

4.Contaminated drinking water provided to the birds. Contamination at the water source, in the reservoir tank or in the water pipes.

5.Rodents and wild birds. Rats move farm to farm, mites biting different birds, cats moving house to house. At one farm, a monkey fell into an open water tank, died from there and was realised when hair from its skin were seen blocking ni***es !!

6.Egg transmission: setting contaminated eggs with clean eggs in one hatchery!!, diseases that are from the parent stock, etc

7.Contaminated feeds and feeding equipment.

8.Farmer’s ornamental birds and pets: keeping pigeons, geese, etc on a commercial farm of exotic birds is not allowed.

9.Airborne infections: these diseases that cause flu, cough, can be transmitted through the wind.

For an effective biosecurity plan, there are aspects that should be considered:

A.Isolation,

B.Human traffic control and

C.Sanitation.

A.Isolation:

This is done through confining the birds in a controlled environment and keeping all other animals out. This is achieved through:

• Construction of fences, putting a gate: to control traffic in and out of the farm

• Practicing all-in-all-out poultry management. Keeping birds of different age groups in one house is highly risky.

If you have to introduce any bird or birds into the farm, ensure that there is an isolation unit as far as possible from the resident birds:

These new birds should be isolated for 2-4 weeks; during this period the birds will be observed for signs of diseases and treated if any is seen, and should be vaccinated before introducing them nearer to the flocks at the farm.

A vet carrying out farm visits should not visit any other farm after visiting a sick farm!
When a vet visits, he should start with the youngest flock at the farm.

Farmers should handle the new birds last after all the others. Ensure you obtain new birds from a reliable source.

Keeping rodents and wild birds away: Rodents spread diseases into the farm through their droppings or secretions.

They are kept out through placing wire nets and avoiding spillage of feeds outside the poultry house. Also ensure there are no dams near the poultry house as this attracts water birds.

FREE FROM STRESS

Clear the surroundings of bushes and shrubs as these provide hiding areas for rodents , mosquitoes and other wild animals.

B.Human traffic control:

Humans are the biggest threat to spread of diseases. Humans transfer diseases through their clothing, shoes, hands, equipment and vehicles. Every farmer should control the number of people that come into the farm. Control movements of poultrymen out of the farm.

C.Sanitation:

The poultry house should be kept clean to ensure that there is no spread of diseases. Chicken litter should be dry at all times as wet and dirty litter predisposes the birds to coccidiosis among other infections.

should have their cars disinfected and their shoes too at the entrance to the farm. Everyone should wash their hands with a disinfectant and wear protective clothing – a dust coat and gumboots before they enter into the poultry house.

There should be a foot-bath at the entrance of every poultry house that all visitors should dip their foot wear. With the emphasis on this foot bath, i have found out many of you here do not regularly change the disinfectant in the foot bath, and putting.

The other important way to prevent entry of diseases into the farms is through . Vaccines aid in providing your birds with a strong immune system that is able to resist infections.

1.Never vaccinate sick birds;

Vaccines are only meant for and not . And every time after vaccination, give vitastress to the birds to keep them stress free, and highly productive.

2.Always keep as this is an essential tool in ensuring good bio-security measures have been attained.

3.It is also important to note that healthy birds that are free from stress will develop an active immune system that protects them from diseases.

Vitastress protects these birds against stress (like stress from vaccination, debeaking, transportation, weather changes, change of feed, deworming, etc).

Stress free birds are those that are not kept in crowded environments, are fed on a balanced diet with clean drinking water, are free from fear and anxiety.

21/08/2021
18/08/2021
14/08/2021
08/08/2021
Hello respected vets, we hope all are fine with our lovely animals. Respect your profession and professional activities ...
24/07/2021

Hello respected vets, we hope all are fine with our lovely animals. Respect your profession and professional activities to respect our animals. Understand their need and treat their pain. So to do so, those who have whole sale or retailers for veterinary drugs in any corner of Ethiopia please contact me to work together to ensure the health, production and productivity of livestock.
Contact Address
0945 22 65 73
09 12 71 90 43
Dr. Mesele Asegede
N.B from veterinary drugs importer

Keep in touch

19/07/2021

Bart syndrome
Bart syndrome is a genetic disorder characterized by the association of congenital localized absence of skin, epidermolysis bullosa, lesions of the mouth mucosa, and dystrophic nails.
Source: https://medizzy.com/feed/1490759

Address

Addis Ababa

Telephone

+251912719043

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