The respiratory disease caused by BHV-1 is commonly known as infectious bovine rhinotracheitis. Symptoms include fever, discharge from the nose, cough, difficulty breathing, and loss of appetite. Ulcers commonly occur in the mouth and nose. Mortality may reach 10 percent.[1] The genital disease causes infectious pustular vulvovaginitis in cows and infectious balanoposthitis in bulls. Symptoms include fever, depression, loss of appetite, painful urination, a swollen vulva with pustules and discharge in cows, and pain on sexual contact in bulls. In both cases lesions usually resolve within two weeks. Abortion and stillbirths can occur one to three months postinfection.[2] BHV-1 also causes a generalized disease in newborn calves, characterized by enteritis and death.