Signs of BRD in cattle, particularly in the early stages, may be subtle and variable.
Affected animals may display some or all of the following signs: nasal/ocular/oral discharge, depression, lethargy, emaciated body condition, laboured or rapid shallow breathing, coughing, extended head and neck, and droopy ears. The first observable sign in affected animals is often depression, observed as lethargy, reluctance to move, lowered head, drooped ears, and half-closed eyes. Serous nasal discharge is common in early stages, turning mucopurulent as the condition progresses.
Increased respiratory rates are common in early stages, due in part to elevated temperature. As the disease progresses, dyspnoea becomes more pronounced and animals may adopt a typical stance of extended neck, drooling, open mouth breathing, and a soft cough.
Affected animals may be found dead without obvious ante-mortem signs, and pneumonia therefore diagnosed at necropsy.
Under conditions of excessive heat load, cattle that display early signs of distress may be animals with pneumonia. Cattle with pneumonia deteriorate very quickly in hot humid conditions because normally functioning lungs are an important means of shedding heat load.
If lameness and joint swelling from arthritis is also present, then involvement of Mycoplasma bovis, Histophilus somni, and Chlamydophila sp. should be suspected.
Misdiagnosis is common. Pneumonia may be missed because cattle may show relatively few clinical signs until severely ill, and auscultation of ruminant lungs may be difficult and not very informative. In addition, a diagnosis of pneumonia may be made in cattle suffering from other conditions, such as heat stress, causing increased respiratory rate or dyspnoea.
At necropsy, anteroventral lobes mostly feel consolidated (firm), rather than spongy, and are discoloured (mostly dark red). The lung surface may be coated with fibrin strands or sheets, which may stick to the parietal pleura (lining of the rib cage).
Interlobular septa are usually prominent. It is not uncommon at necropsy to find more than 50% of lung consolidated with no ante-mortem signs having been detected.
Note that discolouration of the lungs on its own is not a sign of pneumonia. Pneumonia should be diagnosed by feel. Normal lungs feel soft and spongy and are pink, but can be severely discoloured by gravitational pooling of blood or congestion. Lungs with pneumonia feel rubbery (some viruses) or consolidated like liver (other viruses and bacteria).
Laboratory determination of pathogens requires nasal swabs in transport media for virus isolation, and serum from acutely ill and convalescent animals for virus serology. In dead animals, portions of affected lung should be submitted fixed in buffered formalin for histology, and chilled for microbiology and virology.
The main differential diagnoses clinically are infectious bovine rhinotracheitis (because of nasal discharge), and heat stress and systemic illness (causing increased respiratory rate and elevated body temperature).