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An Efficacy of Treatment Methodologies of Bovine Cutaneous Papillomatosis Using Combined Therapy: ..

Introduction: Bovine papillomatosis (BP) is a contagious proliferative disease of cattle that is characterised by warts or papilloma that appear mainly on the skin but also on the mucosa as exophytic papilloma.The aim of this research was to see how a hybrid therapeutic method for treating bovinecutaneous Papillomatosis in animals worked. A case of bovine papillomatosis in a cow is presented, along with its treatment with an autogenous vaccination, auto-hemotherapy, homoeopathic, and allopathic medicines. A four to five-year-old female Holstein Friesian crossbred cow was diagnosed with cauliflower growth of different sizes and pedunculated cutaneous warts on the spine, leg, and teat, as well as discomfort, bleeding, and milking interference. It was diagnosed as bovine papillomatosis based on the history and clinical symptoms.The vaccine was made from a sample taken under aseptic conditions from older wart growths, minced, suspended in regular saline, filtered through muslin fabric, and formalin-treated. The animal was given a 5 mL subcutaneous injection and was revaccinated every seven days for four weeks. The animal was also given its own blood, which was given once a week. On days 1,3,5,7,9, and 16, the animal was given a single shot of Ivermectin (S/C) @ 200g/kg body weight and homoeopathic medicine Thuja-mother tincture and Thuja 200X, as well as allopathic medicine Levamisol at a dose of 2.5 mg/kg/day. In six weeks, the animal was completely recovered. Discussion and Conclusions: Since a single treatment plan is ineffective, recovery is slow, and recurrence is a possibility. Based on the findings of our research, combined therapy is recommended for the treatment of Bovine cutaneous Papillomatosis.



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