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Milking might spread bird flu between cows

Milking might spread bird flu between cows
Credit: MRC Témiscamingue on Unsplash

Milking procedures are likely to be the primary routes of H5N1 influenza virus transmission between dairy cows, suggests a paper in Nature this week.

Highly pathogenic H5N1 was detected in cattle in the U.S. in the spring of 2024 and has affected more than 190 dairy cattle farms in at least 13 states. Milking equipment may be a likely route of transmission, but more detailed evaluation is needed.

Jürgen Richt, Martin Beer and colleagues experimentally infected and lactating cows with H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b, currently circulating in cattle in the U.S., to provide insight about likely modes of transmission. They compared susceptibility and transmission in nine calves infected via the oral and , and three lactating cows via inoculation of the mammary glands; an additional three dairy cows were inoculated with a strain of bird flu circulating in Europe (H5N1 euDG).

Infection of the calves resulted in mild clinical presentation, with moderate viral replication but no transmission to co-housed calves. By contrast, the displayed severe mammary gland infection, including fever, mastitis and abrupt reduction in .

A drastic increase in the levels of virus in the milk was observed, but no evidence of systemic infection or nasal shedding in the nasal passages were detected. These findings indicate that the milk and milking procedures, rather than respiratory spread, are the likely primary routes of H5N1 transmission between cattle.

More information: Juergen Richt, Bird flu dynamics in cows, Nature (2024). .

Journal information: Nature

Citation: Milking might spread bird flu between cows (2024, September 25) retrieved 26 June 2025 from /news/2024-09-bird-flu-cows.html
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