Cattle with ulcers may show signs of colic (lifting hind legs and looking at the flank) and grinding of teeth (bruxism). Chronically affected cattle may lose body condition.
Additional signs may be related to severity of blood loss (pale mucous membranes, weakness, elevated heart and respiratory rates), and black tarry faeces (melaena).
Animals may die suddenly if blood loss is extreme. Black tarry faeces also occur when blood from the respiratory tract is coughed up, swallowed and digested in the abomasum, therefore caudal vena cava syndrome should be considered as a differential diagnosis. When bright red blood is coating formed faeces, it is usually from the large intestine, in which case coccidiosis should be considered. Dull red blood is usually from the small intestine, and may indicate salmonellosis or intussusception. Haemorrhagic bowel syndrome (HBS) is a sporadic, acute, necrohaemorrhagic enteritis that has been reported in cattle in Australia and overseas, with signs similar to those described for abomasal ulcers.
Cattle with perforated ulcers may develop local peritonitis and recover fully if adhesions are not extensive, or they may develop acute diffuse peritonitis and die. The outcome depends on the amount of leakage into the abdomen and whether it is contained by the omentum. Animals affected with local peritonitis will have fever, inappetence, and a pain reaction to deep palpation of the right side ventral abdomen. Those with acute diffuse peritonitis will deteriorate and die quickly with sunken eyes, cold clammy skin and rapid, shallow breathing and pulse.
At necropsy, one or more ulcers will be present in the abomasal mucosa ranging from a few millimetres to 5 cm in diameter. They are easily missed. Examination under a good light following rinsing of the mucosa with water will assist detection. In cattle that have died from a bleeding ulcer, findings typically include pale mucous membranes, watery blood, shrivelled and empty intestines, black and tarry faeces, and blackened fluid within the abomasum. Washing of the ulcer may reveal an eroded blood vessel. Perforated ulcers are often associated with pockets of fluid and pus within the abdomen, possibly trapped within folds of omentum.
Death from other gastrointestinal accidents may resemble deaths from haemorrhage or perforation of the abomasum. If acute diffuse peritonitis is found at necropsy, it is important to determine the cause - the preventative measures against ulceration are different to those against traumatic reticulitis.