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Research Article

Open Vet J. 2025; 15(9): 4106-4113


Cautery disbudding in calves: A comparative assessment of topical wound treatments

David Hawkins, Amanda Carr, Jacques Barnard, Paul Renaud.



Abstract
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Background:
Cautery disbudding is routinely performed on dairy calves to prevent horn growth but this creates open wounds that require effective management. Topical antibiotic products are commonly used, yet evidence supporting their efficacy is limited. Non-antibiotic alternatives may promote healing while supporting antimicrobial stewardship.

Aim:
To compare wound healing outcomes following cautery disbudding in calves treated with either a non-antibiotic aluminum aerosol bandage, an antibiotic spray, both, or no topical treatment.

Methods:
In this randomized multicenter study, 480 calves aged 7-35 days were assigned to one of four treatment groups: (A) antibiotic spray (10% oxytetracycline) plus an aluminum aerosol bandage, (B) antibiotic spray (10% oxytetracycline) only, (C) aluminum aerosol bandage only, or (D) no topical treatment. All calves received sedation, local anesthesia, and analgesia. Wound healing was monitored via wound diameters (WD; mm) and lesion score (LS; scale 0-3) every 7 days from Day 0 (D0) to Day 35 (D35) post-disbudding.

Results:
From D0 to D21, group differences in WD and LS were inconsistent and mostly non-significant. However, by D28 to D35, calves in Group C (aluminum aerosol bandage only) showed significantly improved healing. At D35, mean WD (mean ± SD) in Group C was 2.5 ± 3.25 mm versus 4.3 ± 4.27 (Group A, p=0.0010), 5.3 ± 4.49 (Group B, p0.0001), and 4.5 ± 4.48 (Group D p=0.0003). Furthermore, at D35, the overall mean LS score in Group C was lower and showed improvement versus Group A (p=0.0038), Group B (p

Key words: Cautery; Disbudding; Topical; Treatment; Wound.







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