Injuries to the sole of the foot or feet (abrasion, puncture wounds, bruising, abscess), are commonly associated with excessive wear of moisture-softened feet on rough and abrasive flooring. The conditions are painful and infection of the foot can lead to the development of abscessation and sometimes extension of the infection into the interdigital tissue, up the lower leg and into one or more of the joints of the foot.
Cattle that mount other cattle (riders) wear away the front part of the hind claws and may become lame from bruising and infection. Additional risk factors are cattle temperament, roughness of handling, concreted laneways with twists and turns, and sharp gravel on concrete yards (carried there on muddy feet).
Foot abscesses in sheep (and goats) usually involve one toe or one heel on one foot and cause acute lameness. The medial claw of the hind foot is most commonly affected. Toe abscessation is more frequent in young animals, involves front feet, and may follow horn cracks that provide an opportunity for bacteria to penetrate into the foot. Heel abscessation is more frequent in older, heavier animals, more frequently involving the hind feet and may occur as an extension from an interdigital dermatitis of the soft tissue at the back of the heel.
In cattle, foot abscesses may occur on any claw but are most common on the outside claws of the hind feet. They are thought to follow damage to the bottom of foot (sole), and particularly to the white line area (junction between the outer hoof wall and the sensitive part of the foot), allowing bacteria to penetrate into the foot. Damage most commonly follows abrasion of the foot on hard surfaces such as rough concrete flooring.
The highest risk groups are generally animals introduced to assembly points from high winter rainfall areas, but sole injuries may be acquired in pens that are muddy and soiled by faeces or when animals are competing for trough space at feeding.