4.6 Article

Development and application of a new liver pathology recording system for use in cattle abattoirs

Journal

RESEARCH IN VETERINARY SCIENCE
Volume 158, Issue -, Pages 164-184

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rvsc.2023.03.002

Keywords

Beef cattle; Abattoir; Liver; Pathology

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This study aimed to create a post-mortem data collection tool for evaluating liver diseases in Australian beef cattle and to analyze the pathological findings in both normal and condemned livers. The study developed an efficient tool for rapid assessment of large numbers of cattle livers, allowing thorough investigation into the impact of liver disease on beef production.
Liver disease in beef cattle has a significant global economic impact on feedlot and abattoir industries due to reduced animal performance, carcase yield, and carcase quality. This study aimed to create a post-mortem data collection tool which could be deployed at chain speed on an abattoir floor, as well as to evaluate pathological findings in both normal and condemned livers from an Australian beef cattle population. The first 1006 livers were used to formulate a user-friendly, high-throughput liver grading tool for use in an abattoir setting and to evaluate the histological features of common liver abnormalities. Subsequently, over 11,000 livers from a Southeast Queensland abattoir were analyzed. The most observed defects in condemned livers were liver abscessation, fibrosis, adhesions, and liver fluke, with histological features similar to previous reports. Bacterial culture was performed in 29 cases of liver abscessation, revealing a different balance of flora to that reported internationally. This study has developed an easy to use, efficient data collection tool that enables rapid, highly detailed assessment of large numbers of beef cattle livers at slaughter. This tool will allow thorough investigation into the effect of liver disease on beef production, in both industry and research contexts.

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