Microbiology Final Review – Flashcards

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question

 

 

 

Genus Brucella

answer

 

very small gram negative coccobacilli

 

aerobic

 

obligate parasites of mammals

 

target reproductive organs

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Genus Brucella

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Stains red with Ziehl-Neelsen stain (partially acid fast)

 

Growth on blood agar or chocolate under increased Co2

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B. abortus

(7 biovars)

answer

 

Main Host: Cattle

Abortion, orchitis, epididymitis

 

Sheep, goats, pigs -- sporadic abortion

Horses -- butsitis

Humans -- intermittent systemic disease

 

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B. melitensis

(3 biovars)

answer

 

main hosts: Goats and Sheep

abortion, orchitis, epididymitis

 

Cattle -- sporadic abortion

Humans -- severe systemic disease

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B. suis

(5 biovars)

 

answer

 

Main host: Pigs

abortion, orchitis, epididymitis

 

Humans -- intermittent systemic disease

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B. ovis

answer

 

Sheep

 

Epididymitis

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B. canis

answer

Main host: dogs

abortion, epididymitis, discospondylitis

 

Humans -- mild systemic disease

question

 

B. abortus

 

B. melitensis

 

B. suis

 

 

answer

 

 

have smooth colonies on isolation, due to long LPS O-antigens, and react with antibodies to antigen A and/or antigen M

question

 

 

B. ovis

 

B. canis

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have rough colonies, with short LPS O antigens, and react with antibody to R (rough) antigen, but not A or M

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Colonial Morphology

 

and

 

PCR

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Two ways to distinguish Brucella genera

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Brucellosis

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Horses are resistant, but can have inflammation of the supra-atlantal (poll evil) and supraspinous (fistulous withers) bursae due to infection.  The bursa is swollen and painful initially and may rupture to discharge through a sinus

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Genus Brucella

answer

 

Found worldwide unless eradication programs in place

 

Reservoir: Reproductive organs of animals

 

Major cause of abortion

 

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Brucella

answer

Transmission:

ingestion of organsisms from aborted fetuses and vaginal discharge, or milk

via mating for some species

penetration of skin via cuts and abrasions

inhalation, transplacental

 

sexually mature animals are more susceptible and pregnant animals are most suscetible

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Brucella

answer

no exotoxins known

 

smooth LPS -- smooth strains and species are more virulent than rough, and more resistant to phagocytic killing and complement mediated killing

Required for uptake into macrophages via lipid rafts

 

cyclic beta-glucans in outer membrane

 

Type IV secretion system (Vir system)

 

survival and multiplication in macrophages in vacuole, which is formed via fusion with rough ER

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Brucella Abortus

answer

cattle

 

bacteria ingested and penetrate intestinal mucosa through Peyer's patches

;

engulfed by macrophages

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;

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Brucella abortus

answer

Cattle

bacteria survive within macrophages by blocking phagosome maturation and forming the Brucella-containing vaculoe

;

acidification of vacuole, but no fusion with lysosomes

resistance to oxidative killing via catalase, superoxide dismutaste, etc

fusion with ER membranes

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;

;

;

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Brucella abortus

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cattle

;

spread to regional lymph nods

dissemination hematogenously to reticuloendothelial system and repro tract

erythritol growth factor (sugar alcohol in placenta/mammary/epididymis)

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;

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Brucella abortus

answer

Cattle

replication in trophoblast cells of placenta increases in late gestation due to hormones produced -- infection spreads to fetus

 

placentitis leads to fetal death and abortion

 

large numbers of bacteria are shed in aborted fetuses, placentas, and vaginal discharge

 

presistent lifelong infection with intermittent shedding in productive and mammary secretions

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Brucella abortus

answer

Cattle

abortions in unvaccinated first-calf heifers is the most common presentation, with no overrt systemic illness

late gestation

females usually abort only nce, presumably due to aquired immunity

continue to shed organisms in milk an vaginal secretions

In males, epididymitis and orchitis, with decreased fertility and eventually sterility

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Brucella melitensis

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goats and sheep

 

transmission via ingestion

abortion storms in last 2 months of pregnancy

mastitis common in goats

 

causes the most severe infections in humans

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Brucella ovis

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sheep

 

reduced virulence due to "rough" rather than "smooth" LPS

organism carried by rams -- epididymitis and infertility in ram, disease prevalence increases with age

 

low pathogenicity for ewes - rare abortion in ewes

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Brucella suis

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pigs

 

transmission via ingestion and venereally

 

orchitis with swelling and necrosis of one or both testicles leads to sterility

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Brucella canis

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Dogs- permanently rough so of comparatively low virulence

mainly seen in breeding kennels

causes abortion in last trimester of pregnancy with no prior signs, stillbirth, infertility, vaginal discharge after abortion for several weeks

- fetuses usually autolyzed, suggesting death in utero prior to abortion

In males, inflammation of the testes and epididymis, infertility

Can also see spondylitis and uveitis

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Brucella

 

answer

Pathology

Placentitis: multifocal pale foci are scattered in the cotyledons  and the intercotyledonary spaces also show thickening, with a yellowish gelatinous exudate and necrosis of their surface.

 

marked edema of placenta

 

epididymitis and orchitis are commonly seen in males

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Brucella

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Diagnosis

Examination of placenta is critical

- thickened, yellow gelatinous exudate

- brown,  necrotic, edematous

- gram neg coccobacilli, MZN positive

 

Serology to detect antibody in blood, milk, semen

- milk ring test

- agglutination tests (rose bengal test)

- CF

- AGID, ELISA, etc.

- more serologic tests than any other organism

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B. melitensis

answer

 

On a large sheep farm, there was an abortion storm, with 40% of the ewes aborting in late gestation. Aborted lambs showed edema and congestion of the lungs, spleen and other internal organs.  Placental membranes were edmeatous and had yellow fibrious exuate, and cotyledons were hemorrhagic and necrotic.

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Brucella

answer

 

 

use combination antibiotics treat for 6-8 weeks

in humans and dogs

 

Tetracycline + Rifampin or similar

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Brucella

answer

eradication programs rely upon:

- eradication of positive animals

- serology for monitoring

- vaccination

 

same as other agents of abortion: isolate all aborted animals for several weeks, burn all placentas, clean areas where abortions occured

 

organism can survive for several monts in environment

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Brucella

answer

Prevention

live attenuated vaccines- RBS1 or strain 19 in cattle

- RBS1 is safer, does not elicit antibodies that cause false positive reactions on serologic tests

- all calves should be vaccinated; adult females can be vaccinated if needed; bulls should not be vaccinated (development of orchitis)

 

Rev1 strain in goats - partially attenuated


bacterin for sheep not very effective


no vaccine for dogs, pigs, or humans

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Brucellosis

answer

most commonly reported laboratory-aquired infection, and vet exposure throud disease and vaccine

 

Human transmission--> ingestion of contaminated milk or products, inhalation of infectious aerosols, contamination of skin wound, rarely person-to-person via sexual contact or breast-feeding

 

Human symptoms --> fever, chills, malaise, headache, low back pain, joint pain, drenching sweats, 103-104F, undulant fever

--> chronic: anorexia, weight loss, abdominal pain, joint pain, headace, weakness, irritbility, insominia, depression, constipation

 

Physical findings: mainly splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy

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Bacillus anthracis

answer
A farmer in North Dakota found one of his cows dead on the pasture one morning in June. It had been a very dry spring, but there had been heavy rainstorms and flooding for the past few days.  The farmer suspected a lightning strike had killed the cow.  The next morning, 5 more cows were found dead, with very bloated carcasses and dark blood discharge from noses, mouths and anuses.  Several other animals appeared depressed, were not eating, and had labored breathing and high fevers. 
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Bacillus anthrcis

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REPORTABLE

 

large gram positive spore-forming rods

aerobic

grows on blood agar with "ground glass" morphology

colonies have "medusa head" appearance

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Bacillus anthracis

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spores in soil

endemic in S./N. Dakota, Nebraska, Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, California

 

transmission through ingestion, inhalation, or breaks in skin

 

no direct animal-to-animal transmission

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Bacillus anthracis

answer

primarily a disease of herbivores- carnivores are infected by ingestion of contaminated meat

 

outbreaks associated with climate change, such as after a rainstorm ending a period of drough or dry summer after heavy rain

 

usually warmer months

 

endemic in tropical and sub-tropical areas with high rainfall

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Bacillus anthracis

answer

Capsule and toxins- encoded on separate plasmids, required for disease production

 

Capsule - poly-D-glutamic acid

- loss of capsule leads to reduced virulenc

- encoded on plasmid pXO2

- non-toxic, but protects bacteria against phagocytosis and complement-mediated killin

 

Exotoxin- complex of protective Ag, lethal factor, and edema factor

- loss of toxin leads to loss of virulence

- encoded on plasmid pXO1

 

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Bacillus anthracis

exotoxins

answer

edema factor- adenylate cyclase which causes increased intracellular levels of cAMP once it enters host cells which leads to fluid accumulation in tissues

 

lethal factor- endoprotease that kills macrophages

 

protective Ag- binds three factors and facilitates entry of EF and LF into host cells

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Bacillus anthracis

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Pathogenesis

- ingestion or inhalation of spores from environment

- sproes rapidly phagocytized by macrophages

- spores germinate in macrophages - rapidly produce toxin and capsule

- bacteria multiply within macrophages - carried to regional lymph nodes

- Bacteria kill macrophages and escape - multiply in lymph nodes and spread systemically

- septicemia leads to massive invasion of tissues

- toxemia leads to extensive edema and necrosis and eventually shock, hypotension, anoxia, organ failure

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Bacillus anthracis

answer

In cattle and sheep, most animals found dead with no premonitory signs

- high fever, depression, congested mucosae, subcutaneous edema, respiratory distress, anorexia

 

In pigs, edematous swelling of the throat and head and regional lymphadenitis

 

 In horses, slower progression because disease is usually due to introduction of spores into skin abrasions

- extensive subcutaneous edema of thorax, legs, prgressing to similar disease as cattle

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Bacillus anthracis

answer

Necropsy:

rapid bloating

absence of rigor mortis

dark unclotted bloody discharges from nose, mouth, anus, vulva, etc.

dark bloodstained fluids in body cavities

Splenomegaly - extremely large soft spleen

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Bacillus anthracis

answer

Diagnosis:

clinical signs and necropsy

 

stain of tissue or blood with polychrome methylene blue

 

culture on blood agar, NG on MacConkey, gram stain, confirmation by biochemical tests and PCR

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Bacillus anthracis

answer

Treatment:

 

High doses of penicillin G or oxytetracycline if administered early

 

ciprofloxacin for humnas

 

hyperimmune serum if available

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Bacillus anthracis

answer

Prevention:

in endemic areas, annual vaccination with sterne strain (avirulent due to loss of pXO2 plasmid and capsule) spore vaccine

 

In sporadic epidemics, biosafety is critical!

 

anthrax vaccine for humans, preparation of protective antigen recovered from the culture filtrate of an avirulent, non-encapsulated strain that produces PA during active grwoth

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Bacillus anthracis

answer

major zoonotic pathogen and potential biological warfare agent!

 

natural disease in humans is often cutaneous, with localized papules that progress to ulcers then necrotic eschars, with extensive edema (can be systemic)

 

can progress to septicemia and systemic disease

 

inhalation anthrax also occurs

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Yersinia pestis

answer
A veterinarian in Colorado treated a male cat with sub-mandibular abscess, high fever, anorexia, and dehydration.  The owner mentioned that this was a barn cat who regularly catches rats and prairie dogs, and that two other barn cats had died recently.  While he was examining the cat, it coughed and sneezed several times.  Three days later, the veterinarian developed persistent high fever, myalgias, malaise, and vomiting.  Upon arrival at the ER, she was found to have right lower lobe pneumonia.  She was hospitalized with severe respiratory distress, and over the next few hours became severely hypotensive and hypoxic, and was placed on a ventilator
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Yersinia pestis

answer

gram negative rods, ferment glucose and other sugars but not lactose, oxidasse negative

 

facultatice anaerobes, catalase positive

 

facultative intracellular pathogen

 

"the black death"

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Yersinia pestis

answer

circulates in rodent reservoirs

 

Sylvatic cycle- wild rodents transmitted by fleas

 

Urban cycle- rat populations with transmission by fleas

 

humans-flea bites, direct contact with infected animals or tissues, human aerosols

 

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Yersinia pestis

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Reservoir

 

rodents- rats and fleas in urban areas, prairie dogs, ground squirrels, fleas, in rural areas

 

 

question

 

 

 

Yersinia pestis

answer

Transmission

 

In rodents via fleas, cats through ingestion of infected rodents, rodent bites, or flea bites

 

In humans- usually through flea bites, systemic spread from localized infection or via inhalation of aerosols from animals or people

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Yersinia pestis

answer

 

 

Many virulence factors are regulated by temperature, with some required for maintenance in the flea produced at flea temperature (20C) and others  for virulence in mammals produced at 37C

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Yersinia pestis

answer
Flea bite, ingestion or inhalation depostis bacteria on mucosal surface --> carried to regional lymph nodes (most common sub-mandibular) --> multiply --> spread systemically in bloodstream (in cats frequently fatal) --> pneumonic lesions may result from hematogenous spread and bacteria can spread via aerosols
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Yersinia pestis

answer

bubonic plague - characterized by enlarged lymph nodes associated with lymphatic drainage from site of infection. fever, depression, anorexia, affected superficial lymph nodes may rupture, discharge pus

 

septicemic - fever, hypotension, shock, hepatosplenomegaly

 

pneumonic plague - fever, dyspnea, hypotension, shock, hemoptysis

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Yersinia pestis

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Diagnosis:

culture from pus, blood, or lymph node aspirates

 

giemsa stain smears may show small rods with bipolar staining

 

direct fluorescent antibody staining

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Yersinia pestis

answer

Treatment: may respond to tetracycline of chloramphenicol

 

Control: routine treatment fro fleas, rodent control

 

Prevention: no vaccine

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Yersinia pestis

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Zoonosis:

humans infected through flea bites, animal bites, cat scratches, and aerosols

 

once a human has pneumonic plague, highly infectious to others

 

1-40 cases per year in US, 15% mortality

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Francisella tularensis

answer

gram negative coccobacillary rods, obligate aerobes

 

fastidious, cysteine required for growth

 

NG on MacConkey

 

facultative intracellular pathogen

 

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Francisella tularensis

answer

rabbits, deer, rodents, beaver, muskrats, ticks

 

ticks and deerflies- inhalation of infectious aerosols, ingestion

 

reported in sheep, horses, young pigs- clinical disease in livestock is rare

 

occurs in cats and humans

 

transmission correlates with heavy tick infestations

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Francisella tularensis

answer
bacteria enter host through insect bite, inhalation, ingestion --> ingested by macrophages --> bacteria dely acidification and phagolysosomal fusion, and escape from phagosome into the host cell cytoplasm --> bacteria replicate and kill the macrophage
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Escherichia coli

answer

gram negative rod, oxidase negative, ferments glucose and lactose- bright pink colonies on Mac

 

LPS - in outer membrane and endotoxin

 

moltile withe peritrichous flagella

 

generally colonize GI shortly after birth and persist as normal flora

 

more virulent strains not usually normal flora

question

 

 

 

Francisella tularensis

answer

In sheep and mammals- characterized by sudden onset of high fever, lethargy, anorexia, stiffness, reduced mobility, increased pulse and respiratory rates = classic signs of septicemia

 

lymphadenitis, local or generalized

 

Humans- insect bite handling infected animals, skin ulcer, swollen lymph node, fever and septicemia

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Francisella tularensis

answer

Diagnosis:

clinical signs are non-specific

heavy tick infestation in severely ill animals within endemic areas

culture or detection by PCSR or fluorescent antibody stain of organism

must differentiate from other causes of septicemia- plague

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Francisella tularensis

answer

treatment: effective antibiotics include streptomycin, amikacin, and fluoroquinolones

 

Control: tick control, in endemic regions prevention from hunting wildlife

 

Prevention: no vaccines, vaccine for humans under review

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Francisella tularensis

answer

causes a serious and potentially fatal infections in humans

 

hunters, trappers, veterinarians,  and lab workers under particular risk

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Burkholderia mallei

answer
A horse in quarantine after import from Bahrain developed purulent slightly bloody bilateral nasal discharge, and examination showed ulcerous lesions along the nasal septum.  The submandibular lymph nodes were swollen and draining purulent discharge.  In addition, he had nodules and ulcers on his hind legs and lateral abdomen, some of which had purulent exudate.
question

 

 

 

Burkholderia mallei

answer

short gram negative rods, aerobic, obligate parasites

 

facultative intracellular pathogens

 

highly resistant to many antibiotics

 

causative agent of glanders, a disease that affects primarily horses, mules, and donkeys --> REPORTABLE

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Burkholderia mallei

answer

Reservoir: sub-clinically affected chronic carrier horses, donkey, mules

 

eradicated from US in mid 1900s

 

endemic in much of Eastern Europe, Asia, and N Africa, including former USSR, Iraq, Turkey, India, Pakistan, China, and United Arab Emirates

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Burkholderia mallei

answer

Transmission:

ingestion of food or water contaminated with respiratory exudates or skin exudates from clinically affected or carrier animals

 

Carnivores- ingestion of contaminated meat

 

infection through skin cuts and abrasions

 

inhalation

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Glanders

answer

three cardinal signs of clinical glanders in equines that can occur individually or in combination:

 

chronic nasal discharge that occurs with or without ulceration of the nasal septum - can progress to pulmonary, with nodules and abscesses in the lungs

 

enlargement and induration along the lymphatics and lymph nodes, especially the submandibular lymph nodes

 

nodules , pustules or ulcers on the flanks and extremeties of infected animals - swollen lymph vessels are present on the flanks of infected animals in a manifestation referred to as cording

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Acute Glanders

answer

nasal and pulmonary signs, including high fever, decreased appetite, coughing progressive dyspnea, nasal discharge, and ulcers and nodules on the nasal mucosa --> death within a few days to weeks

 

 

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Chronic Glanders

answer

develops insidiously and results in progressive debilitation

 

couging, malaise, dyspnea, intermittent fever, enlargement of lymph nodes, chonic nasal discharge, and ulcers, nodules and stellate scars on th enasal mucosa

 

skin and lymphatics may also be involved

 

slowly progressive and often fatal- affected animals may live for years before seccumbing to the disease

question

 

 

 

Burkholderia mallei

answer

in endemic areas, clinical signs may be diagnositic

 

culture from lesions (not done in most labs)

 

serology - complement fixation and ELISA tests

 

mallein test = skin test similar to Tb tests

 

inject mallein just below lower eyelid; positive test is indicated by local swelling and mucopurulent ocular discharge within 24-48 hrs

 

 

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Burkholderia mallie

answer

Treatment- euthanasia of affected equids in most countries

 

Control- in an outbreak, quarantine of all animals and affected premises, in endemic areas, keep animals away from communal feeding and watering areas

 

Prevention- testing of animals prior to shipping across national and international lines; no vaccine

 

question

 

 

 

Burkholderia mallei

answer

glander is rare but serious zoonotic diease

 

human infections can be traced to direct contact with infected animals or to laboratory exposure

 

mortality in acutely infected humans reaches 95% in three weeks if untreated

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Burkholderia pseudomallei

answer

gram negative coccobacillary rods bipolar staining

 

causative agent of mellioidosis in many animals an humans

 

grows on blood agar, growth on ashdown's agar

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Burkholderia pseudomallei

answer

Reservoir: widespread in soil and water in tropical areas (no found in US, europe)

 

Transmission: ingestion, inhalation, or skin contamination from environmental sources, occurs in wide range of animals- horses, sheep, goats, dogs, cats, primates, etc.

 

- infection usually disseminated, with abscesses developing in many organs- lungs, spleen, liver, etc

 

- chronic, devilitating, progressive disease with long incubation period

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Burkholderia pseudomallei

answer

Treatment:

euthanasia of infected animals in most countries

antibiotic treatment is expensive and unreliable, relapses frequent

 

Prevention- no vaccines available

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Coxiella burnetii

answer

small pleiomorphic gram negative rod

 

obligate intracellular pathogen

 

no growth in lab media, require tissue culture

 

causative agent of Q fever

 

affects sheep, goats, cattle, humans, also cats and dogs

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Coxiella burnetii

answer

Reservoir: obligate intracellular pathogen so the reservoir is carrier animals, a tropism for reproductive tissues

 

Transmission: aerosols of bacterin in vaginal discharges, can persist in dust, aerosols for long periods, direct contact with pregnant shedders

question

 

 

 

Coxiella burnetii

answer

Pathogenesis:

bacteria replicate in monocytes and macrophages primarily

 

do not block fusion of phagosome and lysosome

 

require acidic conditions of mature phagolysosome

 

bacteria replicated exclusively within the phagosome

 

slow replication (20hr generation time) may explain why organism does not cause more damage

 

spread hematogenously in macrophages to reproductive tissues

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Coxiella burnetii

answer

mainly asymptomatic in sheep, goats, cattle

 

reproductive failure often only clinical symptom

sporaic late term abortions, stillbirths, weak newborns, infetility

 

organisms shed in placenta, vaginal discharge, also in milk, urine, feces

question

 

 

 

Coxiella burnetii

answer

Necropsy:

placentitis, rarely fetal lesions, esp pneumonia

 

Intercotyledonary placenta is thickened, opaque and multifocally covered by tan clumps of exudate.  margins of several cotyledons are tan (necrosis) and centers are mottled red-brown (congestion and exudation). 

 

Difficult to distinguish from brucellosis by appearance only

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Coxiella burnetii

answer

Diagnosis:

smears from placental tissue and uterine discharges stained with modified Ziehl-Neelsen (MZN) method or giemsa

 

can use immunofluorescence or immunohistochemistry with specific antibioties to confirm

 

Serology- complement fixation, ELISA, etc.

question

 

 

Coxiella burnetii

answer

Treatment- not usually done

 

Control- standard with infectious abortion, careful disposal of placentas, etc, and segregation of animals that have aborted

 

Prevention- vaccines for domestic ruminants available in some countries but not in US

question

 

 

 

Coxiella burnetii

answer

Zoonotic pathogen and potential biological warfare agent- vets, stockyard workers, sheep shearers, tanners, farmers are at risk

 

Humans- mid flu-like symptoms, with abrupt onset of fever, malaise, headache, myalgia, and symptoms of atypical pneumonia (dry cough, dyspnea, chest pain)

may also include GI symptoms, with nausea, and vomiting

chronic forms- may cause endocarditis

question

 

 

 

Rickettsia rickettsii

answer

very small gram negative coccobacillary rods

 

obligate intracellular pathogens- must be grown in living hosts, tissue culture, embryonated eggs

 

true gram negative cell wall, with peptidoglycan and outer membrane with LPS, but gram stain poorly

 

more readily seen by immunologic methods with specific antibodies

question

 

 

 

Rickettsia rickettsii

answer

reservoir: ticks, rodents

 

american dog tick, dermacentor veriabilis, and RM wood tick, D. andersonii

 

theses ticks can carry it at all life stages (larva, nymphs, adults) and transmit the bacteria transoverially

 

1-3 % of these ticks carry this disease

question

 

 

 

Rickettsia rickettsii

answer

Transmission:

 

Tick bite-which requires attachment and feeding of tick for 6-20 hrs

 

less frequently, removal of tick from dog leads to human infecton via skin abrasion

 

april - october

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Rickettsia rickettsii

answer

cycle of ticks and hosts

 

infected tick larvae --> rodent  --> infected nymph tick --> infected adults --> dog/human --> infected tick eggs --> infected larvae

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Rickettsia rickettsii

answer

inoculated into the skin by a tick bite

spread through the bloodstream and infect cells of the vascular endothelium

trigger phagocytosis into these cells ( type IV secretion system)

once in phagosome they rapidly escape into host cell cytoplasm (phospholipase)

move on polymerized actin tails and escape into neighboring cells

primary lesion - vasculitis

endothelial damage triggers fibrinlytic and coagulagulation cascade

leads to thrombosis and leakage of RBCs into tissues causing rash and petechial lesions

leads to thrombocytopenia, DIC, vascular collapse, renal and heart failure

question

 

 

 

Rickettsia rickettsii

answer

Clinical Signs

fever 4-5 days after tick bite

lethargy, anorexia, depression, diarrhea

cutaneous lesions include hyperemia and edema of extremities, ears, lips, scrotum

petechial lesions visible on oral and genital mucosa

ocular signs: conjuntivitis, retinitis, uveitis

arthritis, myalgia, stiffness, reluctance to walk

vestibular and neurologic signs

 

question

 

 

 

Rickettsia rickettsii

answer

Necropsy:

widespread petechial and ecchymotic hemorrhages in all tissues

lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly

 

necrotizing vasculitis with perivascualr cuffing

question

 

 

 

Rickettsia rickettsii

answer

Diagnosis

CBC- thrombocytopenia, leukocytosis with a left shift, prolonged coagulation time

 

Serology- IFA immunofluorescence assay, which can be used either with single serum looking for high titer or with paired sera looking for increase in titer

 

can also look for rickettsia in tissue (biopsies) of petechial lesions) by immunohistologic stain or by PCR

question

 

 

 

Rickettsia rickettsii

answer
A 2 year hunting dog was seen with a 3 day history of fever (40.6 C), anorexia, depression, lethargy and vomiting on the day he was seen.  Petechial hemorrhages were seen on the dog's oral mucous membranes as well as multifocal retinal hemorrhages.  He had edema of the scrotal area, and was reluctant to walk, and when he did walk seemed unblalanced,, with his head tilted to one side.
question

 

 

 

Rickettsia rickettsii

answer

Treatment: tetracycline or oxytetracycline

 

Prevention: no vaccine

avoidance of tick-infested areas and prompt removal of attached ticks, and use of acaricides

 

Zoonotic: occurs in humand and dogs, but not spread from dogs to humans except via tick vectors. 

Dog disease sentinel for human disease

humans- major symptom is petechial rash with lesions on trunk, extremities, palms and soles

question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

answer

gram negative coccobacillary rods

 

obligate intracellular parasites

 

tropism for monocytes

 

causative agent of potomac horse fever = equine

monocytic ehrilichiosis

 

first identified in 1979 in outbreak in Maryland

question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

answer

Epidemiology

infectious but not contagious

 

occurs in sporadic localized epidemics

 

found in US, canada, S America, Europe

 

highest prevalence near large rivers

 

seasonal- most cases in summer and autumn in areas with cold winters, year-round in warmer areas

 

seen only in equids- rare in foals <1 year of age

question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

answer

 

 

Reservoir: Trematodes found in fresh water snails and aquatic insects, life cycle involves trematodes (flukes), snails, aquatic insects, possibly bats or birds

 

 

question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

answer

Transmission:

ingesition of aquatic insects, ingestion of trematodes or of grass contaminated with trematodes and snails

 

apparently NOT from biting insects

 

horses appear to be an accidental dead end host for an organism that normally cycles between trematode life stages in snails, aquatic insects, bats, etc.

question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

answer

Life Cycle

horses ingest infected fluke larvae/or adult insects --> potomavac horse fever may develop in hoses, causing signs such as anorexia, fever, diarrhea, signs of colic, and laminitis --> neorickettsia risticii is the agent of the disease --> N. resticii - infected trematodes (flukes) --> snails --> water insects --> N. risticii move to aquatic insects (such as mayflies and caddisflies)

question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

answer

Pathogenesis

after ingestion, bacteria infect blood monocytes

block phagolysosomal fusion and persist in monocytes

spread to GI, colonic epithelial cells, mast cells, and tissue macrophage

infection of GI leads to diarhea, due to disruption of sodium and chloride absorption and increased water loss in lg and sm colon

question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

answer

Clinical signs:

incubation period: 2-3 weeks

 

acute onset of anorexia and depression, with rising fever (107C) decreased GI sounds

 

within 24-48 hrs moderate to severe diarrhea develops, from "cow-pie" to projectile watery diarhea

 

colic (mild to acute), subcutaneous ventral edema seen in some cases, dehydration, increased heart and respiratory rate

 

laminitis in 40% of cases, 5-30% fataltiy

 

may see abortion in mares that were pregnant when infected

 

question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

answer

Diagnosis

Hematology - leukopenia and neutropenia with left shift, thrombocytopenia, hemoconcentration

 

Blood chemistry - hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hypochloremia, metabolic acidosis

 

definitive diagnosis base on isolation of N. risticii from blood (10d) or feces (13d) of infected horses, or PCR

 

Serology- IFA (indirect immunofluorescence assay) used, but high rate of false positives

 

question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

answer
In mid-August in Michigan, a 6 year old Quarter horse mare developed fever (107F), depression and anorexia.  Two days later, she developed profuse watery projectile diarrhea that persisted for several days.  She showed signs of colic had ventral edema, and also developed laminitis.  A week later, two other animals in the same pasture began to show similar symptoms.
question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

answer

Necropsy

subcutaneous edema of ventral body wall

 

very fluid consistency to contents of colon

 

cecum and colon- congestion, hemorrhage, and scattered mucosal erosions

 

swollen edematous mesenteric lymph nodes

 

detect organisms in tissue with silver stain or immunohistology

 

aborted fetuses have enterocolitis and necrosis of mesenteric lymph nodes

 

question

 

 

 

Neorickettsia (Ehrlichia)

risticii

 

answer

Treatment: oxytetracycline IV for 5-7 days

 

Prevention: inactivated whole cell vaccine (6 mo or before summer), 1 strain of Mr, and may provide minimal protection against other strains

 

No Zoonotic potential- not a human pathogen

question

 

 

Anaplasma marginale

 

Anaplasma ovis

answer

infect erythrocytes

 

cattle, sheep, goats

question

 

 

Anaplasma phagocytophilum

 

Ehrlichia ewingii

answer

infect granulocytes

 

tick-borne fever in ruminans; equine, canine, human granaulocytic anaplasmosis

 

canine granulocytic ehrlichiosis

question

 

 


Anaplasma platys

answer

Infect platelets

 

canine cyclic thrombocytopenia

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia canis

answer

Infect monocytes and macrophages

 

canine monocytic ehrlichiosis

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia ruminatium

answer

Infect macrophages and vascular endothelial cells

 

heartwater

question

 

 

Anaplasma

&

Ehrlichia

answer

small gram negative coccobacilli

 

do not have peptidoglycan cell walls

 

obligate intracellular parasites

(cannot be cultured ex. in tissue culture or egg yolk sac)

 

tropism for hematopoietic cells- RBCs, granulocytes, monocytes, platelets, seen in bloodsmears by giemsa stain (purplish-blue small organisms individual or clusters- morulae)

 

vector borne- ticks

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma marginale

 

Anaplasma ovis

 

answer

Anaplasmatosis (gall sickness)

cattle, sheep, goats, other ruminants

 

worldwide in tropical and sub-tropical regions--> south/central America, US, S. Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia

 

infect erythrocytes- wright-giemsa stain

basophilic intracellular organisms, spherical incusion near margins

 

 

question

 

 

Anaplasma marginale

&

Anaplasma ovis

answer

Reservoir: infected carrier animals

 

Transmission: ticks, iatrogenic (needles, dehorning tools, etc), seasonal- vector season, trans-stadiallly but not trans-ovarially in ticks

 

Pathogenesis: infect mature erythrocytes --> multiply within membrane-bound vesicles, at edge of erythrocyte --> exit via exocytosis, and infect more RBC --> parasitized RBC are removed by macrophages

 

question

 

 

Anaplasma marginale

&

Anaplasma ovis

answer

Clinical signs:

incubation period: 3-4 weeks, number of infected RBC doubles every 24-48 hrs

 

requires about 15% RBCs to be infected for apparent clinical signs--> fever, anorexia, weight loss, icterus (jaundice)

 

acute disease--> severe anemia, pale mucous membrane, lethargy, no hemoglobinemia, hemoglobinuria (destruction of erythrocytes), fever, death

 

many animals survive emaciated condition - subclinical carriers

 

more severe in adult animals >3 yrs --> young generally become sub-clinically infected- carriers

 

peracute cases- affected animals are hyperexcitable and tend to attack attendants just before death

question

 

 

Anaplasma marginale

&

Anaplasma ovis

 

answer

Diagnosis:

clinical signs in endemic areas, marked anemia, jaundice in absence of hemoglobinuria

 

hematology: giemsa stained bloodsmear showing densly staining bodies near periphery of RBCs

 

Immunofluorescence or PCR

 

Serologic testing (ELISA, CF) detect chronic carriers

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma marginale

&

Anaplasma ovis

answer
Three 6-10 year old cows in a herd in Alabama developed fever, anorexia, and lethargy.  All were in thin body condition.  Their mucous membranes were jaundiced and showed marked pallor.  One tried to attack the herdsman, and then dropped dead.
question

 

 

Anaplasma marginale

&

Anaplasma ovis

answer

Treatment: long acting oxytetracycline

 

Prevention: vaccination (killed or live attenuated) prior to introduction to endemic areas can prevent severe disease but not carriage

- weekly dipping in acaricide to reduce tick burden

- testing herd and removing carriers

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia (Cowdria)

ruminantium

answer

causative agent of heartwater in domestic and wild ruminants- REPORTABLE

 

found in sub-saharan Africa and Carribean islands

transmitted by amblyomma ticks- not currently in US but could be imported

 

replicates in macrophages and vascular endothelial cells of capillaries, esp. nervous system leading to increased vascular permeability

 

found as clumped organisms at ends of nuclei in cytoplasm of brain capillary endothelial cells

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia (cowdria)

ruminatium

answer

clinical signs: sudden fever, neurologic signs (chewing movements, exaggerated blinking, high stepping, circling,  prostration, convulsions) in less acute cases- neuro signs are inconsistant

 

Necropsy: extensive edema (pericardium, thorax, lungs, brain), splenomegaly, extensive mucosal and serosal hemorrhages

 

Treatment: tetracycline administered early in disease, tick control

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma phagocytophilum

answer

causative agent of tick-borne fever in cattle and ruminants as well as equine, canine and human granulocytic anaplasmosis

 

more common in older animals

 

infects granulocytes, where it forms microcolonies called morulae

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma phagocytophilum

answer

Reservoir: infected carriers, deer, white-footed mice, squirrels, other small rodents

 

Transmission: tick bites, trans-stadially but not trans-ovarially in ticks

 

found worldwide in northern latitudes (europe, US, etc) upper midwest and northeastern regions and pacific coastal states

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma phagocytophilum

answer

Pathogenesis

bacteria injected through dermis by tick bite --> phagocytized by neutrophils

 

do not stimulate oxidative burst, and block subsequent oxidative responses (immunosuppresion)

 

block maturation of phagosome at early stage- does not acquire early endosomal markers, does not acidify or acquire V-ATPase

 

multiply within membrane-blound vacuole

delays apoptosis of infected cells

 

immunosuppression predisposes to opportunistic infections

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma phagocytophilum

answer

Ruminants Clinical Signs

incubation period of 5-14 days, occurs after moving animals to tick-infested pastures, esp in spring

 

sudden fever lasts 4-10 days, may recur

reduced appetite, lethargy, decreased milk production, weight loss, cough, resp. distress

 

pregnant animals in late gestation may abort

 

immunosuppression, increased susceptibility to many other infections

 

transient thrombocytopenia, prolonged leukopenia

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma phagocytophilum

answer

Horse Clinical Signs

incubaton 8-14 days

 

severity of clinical signs varies with age >4 years most severe

 

fever, depression, reduced appetite, limb edema, petechiation of mucosal membrane, icterus, ataxia, staggering, reluctance to move, base-wide stance, weakness, ataxia may be severe (fractures possible), abortion, laminitis, immunosuppression, increased susceptibility to other infections

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma phagocytophilum

answer

Diagnosis-

clincial signs and geographic area, time of year

ID morulae in neutrophils, cytology, PCR

Lab findings- leukopenia, transient thrombocytopenia

morulae in nuetrophils and eosinophils

 

Treatment- long acting tetracycline

 

Prevention- no vaccine, tick control

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia canis

answer

causative agent of canine monocytic ehrlichiosis

 

Reservoir: domestic and wild canids

 

Transmission: ticks

 

found world wide in tropical and subtropical areas

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia canis

answer

Pathogenesis & Clinical Signs

incubation period 1-3 weeks

 

bacteria replicate in monocytes, and macrophages- block phagolysosome fusion

 

acute phase: fever, depression, lethargy, petechial lesions, swollen lymph nodes and spleen, mild weight loss, epistaxis

 

cytology: thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, anemia

 

w/o treatment generally progresses to subclinical phase, with persistent carriage in spleen and persistent thrombocytopenia

 

chronic: some dogs develop persistent bone marrow depression, pancytopenia, uncontrolled bleeding, secondary infections

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia canis

answer
A 6 year old irish setter was brought to the vet because of 3 week history of listlessness, anorexia, weight loss, coughing, and generally malaise.  When examined, it had epistaxis, fever, subcutaneous hemorrhages on the abdome, and enlarged parotid and subligual lymph nodes.  Hematology showed anemia, thrombocytopeniaa, and lymphopenia, with immature erythrocytes and lymphocytes
question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia canis

answer

Diagnosis:

cytology: morulae in monocytes

 

thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, anemia

 

blood chemistry: hypergobulinemia, elevated liver enzymes

 

antibody titers to hyperglobulinemia, elevated liver enzymes

 

antibody titers by indirect FA

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia canis

answer

Treatment: tetracycline or oxytetracycline

 

Prevention: no vaccines, avoidance of tick-infested areas, prompt removal of ticks, and topical acaricides

 

thrombocytopenia with infection of monocytes- decreased production of platelets from hypoplastic bone marrow, seqestration, increased consumption, secretion of platelet-migration inhibiton factor my lymphocytes exposed to infected cells

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia ewingii

answer

causative agent of canine granulocytic ehrlichiosis

 

Reservoir: domestic and wild canids, deer

 

Transmission: ticks

 

found US, south and southeast

 

younger animals

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia ewingii

answer

Pathogenesis and Clinical Signs

bacteria multiply in phagosomes in neutrophils (granulocyes)- block phagolysosomal fusion

 

acute fever, depression, lethargy, acute polyarthritis, lameness

 

Neuro signs- ataxia, tremors, vestibular defects

 

difficult to distinguish from A phagocytophilum infection

question

 

 

 

Ehrlichia ewingii

answer

Diagnosis: thrombocytopenia, morulae in neutrophils, neutrophilic polysynovitis, no specific serotest, PCR testing

 

Treatment: tetracycline or oxytetracycline

 

Prevention: no vaccines available, avoid tick-infested areas and prompt removal of attached ticks, topical acaricides

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma platys

answer

causative agent of canine cyclic thrombocytopenia

 

Reservoir: domestic and wild canids

 

Transmission: ticks, proably but not proven

 

found worldwide, including southern US

 

organism has never been cultured

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma platys

answer

Pathogenesis

bacteria infect and multiply in platelets (not in megakaryocytes in bone marrow)

 

leads to massive drop in platelet count, which resolves

 

bacteremia and thromocytopenia recur repeatedly at 1-2 week intervals

question

 

 

 

Anaplasma platys

answer

Clinical Signs: acute fever, lethargy, pale mucous membranes, petechial hemorrhages of skin and oral, bleeding

 

Diagnosis: thrombocytopenia, morulae in platelets (seen in mycroscopy or fluorescent Ab staining), indirect FA test for serum antibodies


Treatment: tetracycline or oxytetracycline

 

Prevention: no vaccine , avoid tick infested areas and prompt removal, topical acaricides

question

 

 

 

Haemotropic Mycoplasmas

answer

small uncultureable bacteria, formerly classified as rickettsia but reclassified based on small size, lack of cell wall, and resistance to penicillin

 

associate with surface of erythrocytes (not intracellular) and cause severe hemolytic anemia

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma haemofelis

answer

feline infectious anemia

 

occurs worldwide- strongly associated with male sex and access to outdoors

 

Reservoir- infected cats

 

Transmission: not certian, possibly fleas or bite wounds, experimentally through blood transfusion

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma haemofelis

answer

bacteria attach to the surface of erythrocytes - not intracellular

 

damage to erythrocytes --> direct damage by pathogen, immune-mediated mechanisms

 

 

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma haemofelis

answer

Clinical Signs

anemia, lethargy, mucosal pallor, tachypnea, tachycardia

 

severe disease- profound anemia, overwhelming parasitemia rapidly results in death

 

more commonly- mild disease with anemia and jaundice

 

immunocompetent cats- successive waves of parasitemia are gradually eliminated by immune response

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma haemofelis

answer

Diagnosis:

demonstration of bacteri on surface of RBCs in giemsa-stained smears

PCR to identify organism in blood

hematology: may see reduced packed cell volume and evidence of regenerative anemia

 

Treatment: doxycycline, blood transfusions

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma haemocanis

answer

hemotropic mycoplasmosis in dogs

 

milder disease in dogs, clinical signs apparently in normal dogs

 

transmitted by brown dog tick

 

forms chains of organisms across the surface of the erythrocyte

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma haemosuis

answer

hemolytic anemia in pigs

 

maninly young piglets

 

organisms on surface of erythrocytes and free in plasma

question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila felis

answer

causative agent of conjunctivitis and rhinitis in cats

 

"feline pneumonitis" misnomer rarity of lower respiratory disease with pathogen

 

gram negative bacterium

 

obligate intracellular pathogen with unique developmental cycle - grown in tissue culture, does not grow in standard media

question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila felis

answer

unique developmental cycle includes infectious form and replicative form

 

elementary body (EB): hardy, extracellular form, non-replicative, but infectious--> can survive in environment

 

Reticulate body (RB): fragile, metabolically active and replicative --> does not survive in environment

 

 

question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila felis

answer

Developmental cycle:

elementary bodies (infectious form) attach to host cells--> taken up by receptor mediated endocytosis and block maturation of phagosome--> EBs reorganize into RBs (replicative form)-> multiply--> some continue replication others tranform to EBs--> inclusion body contains both --> cell lysis with release of infections EBs and loss of RBs

question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila felis

answer

Reservoir: cats

 

Transmission: direct contact or aerosols, transmitted to kittens through parturition, venereal transmission (not proven)

 

Clinical signs: conjunctival hyperemia (redness), chemosis (swelling of conjunctiva), blepharospasm, serous to mucopurulent ocular discharge, sneezing, nasal discharge

question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila felis

answer
A 2 year old cat developed sneezing, nasal discharge, and ocular discharge, with chemosis (swelling of the conjunctiva), conjunctival inflammation, and blepharospasm
question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila felis

 

answer

Diagnosis:

stained conjunctival smears showing intracytoplasmic inclusions (giemsa or iodine)

culture in tissue culture

PCR, commercial ELISA

 

Treatment: tetracycline

 

Prevention: live and inactivated vaccines are available

question

 

 

 

Moraxella bovis

answer

Short fat gram negative rods, usually in pairs

 

aerobic, oxidase positive

 

grow on blood, beta-hemolytic, NG on MacConkey

 

causative agent of infectious bovine kerato-conjunctivitis

question

 

 

 

Moraxella bovis

answer

Reservoir: carrier cattle - carriage in conjunctiva, nares, vagina, occurs worldwide

 

Transmission: mainly face flies, direct contact, tall grass, etc.

question

 

 

 

Moraxella bovis

answer

Virulence factors:

Pili- two different types involved in adherence to cornea, extensive antigenic variation in amjor pilus protein

 

RTX hemolysin- kills neutrophils and damages corneal tissue

 

Loss of either pili or toxin leads to avirulence

question

 

 

 

Moraxella bovis

answer

Pathogenesis

bacteria transmitted by face flies attach to corneal surface via pili, which allows bacteria to circumvent clearance by lacrimal secretions and blinking

 

replicating bacteria produce a calcium-dependent RTX hemolysin that damages corneal tissue and causes corneal erosions within 12 hrs

 

inflammatory response brings neutrophils to infected area

 

toxin kills neutrophils and release of hydrolytic enzymes from neutrophils contributes to corneal damage

question

 

 

 

Moraxella bovis

answer

Clinical signs

incubation period 2-3 days

 

early signs are edema and infection of the conjunctiva, accompanied by copius watery lacrimation, blepharospasm and photophobia

 

may have low fever, decrease in milk yield and decrease appetite

 

after 1-2 days, a small opacity appears in the center of the cornea that may become elevated and ulcerated over the 2-4 days- peak infection may cover entire cornea

 

in most cases- cornea will heal within few weeks, but some animals may develop severe ulceration resulting in blindness

question

 

 

 

Moraxella bovis

answer
Over half of the beef cattle in a herd on open pasture developed photophobia, excessive lacrimation, mucopurulent ocular dicharge, conjunctivitis, and varying degrees of keratitis.  Both bilater and unilater eye infections were seen. Lesions varied from mild conjunctivitis to ulcerative keratitis.  Disease incidence was much higher in the younger animals. 
question

 

 

 

Moraxella bovis

answer

Diagnosis:

affects many animals in a herd

culture of lacrimal secretions on blood agar and MacConkey (should yeild beta-hemolytic colonies on blood and NG on MacConkey)

confirm biochemical tests or PCR

 

Treatment: topical antibiotics, parenteral oxytetracycline

 

Prevention: pilus and hemolysin vaccines are available but have limited efficacy, fly control

 

 

question

 

 

 

Leptospirosis

answer

Worldwide zoonotic disease, almost all mammals susceptible

 

gram negative bacteria

 

over 250 serovars

question

 

 

 

Leptospirosis

answer

Disease characteristics

depends on host/serovar combination

 

age and condition of animal

 

certain serovars prevalent within an area

 

each serovar has one or more maintenance hosts in an ecosystem --> wildlife, domestic animals

question

 

 

 

Leptospirosis

answer

maintenance host: perferred host, obvious illness rare, organism persists, long term shedding, low titers of Ab, reservoirs of infection, vary infectious

 

Incidental host: all mammals except maintenance host, severe disease common, organism cleared, little shedding, high titers, transmission to other animals is rare

question

 

 

 

E. coli

answer

Virulence Factors

pili and toxins encoded

capsular polysaccharide = K antigen

endotoxin

Fibrial adhesins (K, F, P)

K88 (F4) pigs, K99 (F5) calves, lambs, pigs, pups

987P (F6) neonatal pigs, F18 - older pigs

F41- calves

bundle forming pili, intimin, and Tir

question

 

 

 

Leptospirosis

answer

clinical signs- incidental hosts

fever, anorexia, vomiting/diarrhea, bleeding, hemolytic anemia, jaundice, renal failure, abortion storms --> livestock and horses

 

Clinical signs- maintenance hosts

subclinical infections, develop clinical signs as sequelae in chronic infection

dogs- end-stage kidneys and chronic renal failure

cattle- infertility and late term abortions

question

 

 

Hardjo

 

answer
maintenance Host--> cattle
question

 

 

Pomona

answer
maintenance host --> pigs, cattle, skunks
question

 

 

Grippotyphosa

answer
maintenance host --> raccoons, possums
question

 

 

Icterohaemorrhagiae

answer
maintenace host--> rats
question

 

 

Canicola

answer
maintenance host --> dogs
question

 

 

 

E. coli

answer

Protein Exotoxins

Heat Labile toxin: LT

AB subunit protein exotoxin

A active unit, B binding unit

increases cAMP in GI, extensive watery diarrhea

 

Heat stable toxin: ST

small peptide toxin binds and increases cGMP

question

 

 

 

bratislava

answer

maintenace host --> pigs, horses

 

 

question

 

 

 

Lepto

answer

infection spread by contact with urine from infected animals

organism thrives in moist warm climates

 

can survive outside the body for several months

 

infection rates in maintenance host are often 30% or higher

 

Routes of infection: ocular, oral, reproductive, skin

question

 

 

 

Lepto

answer

Pathogenesis:

penetrates mucous membranes --> bacteremia --> liver, kidney, spleen, CNS, etc --> antibodies develop

 

maintenance hosts --> privileged sites --> long term shedding

 

Incidental hosts --> recovery with short term urinary shedding

question

 

 

 

Lepto

answer

Virulence factors:

motility, hemolysins, LPS- not toxic, cytotoxins

 

varies from region to region

increase rainfall --> increase incidence

more common in spring and fall

question

 

 

 

Lepto

answer

Diagnostics

 

Indirect --> serology


Direct -->

fluorescent antibiotic test- sensitivity, live organisms not required, rapid, inexpensive, can be used on frozen tissues

Immunohistochemistry- insensitive, silver-stains tricky, inexpensive, widely available, fixed tissue

Culture- definitive, identify serovar, expensive, difficult, long time, live organism

PCR- sensitive, not serovar specific, expensive, rapid, technically demanding

question

 

 

 

Microscopic agglutination test

answer

used for Lepto

widely available, relatively specific

insensitive for some serovars

vaccination complicateds interpretation

highest titer = infecting serovar

titers likely to be low in acute stages of disease

 

Interpretation--> do not compare between labs, cross-reactivity common, vaccine titers 60-120 days- titers to multiple serovars

 

question

 

 

Lepto

answer

first described in 1899- canicola, icterohaemorrhagiae

dogs main source of exposure

vaccines developed

prevent disease well, may not prevent infection

incidence dropped dramatically

Reemergence- serovars involved

increased diagnosis = increased in disease

question

 

 

BPP: Bolin's Prevalence Postulate

answer

No of diagnoses = Z x N x L

 

Z= the true incidence of the disease

N= the number of animals at risk

L= number of leptospirologists in the area

question

 

 

 

Lepto

answer

Cross reaction = Cross protection

 

infection and vaccination with one serovar induces antibiodies that react with other serovars

 

certain patterns of x-reactivity are typical

dogs infected with grippo, also have titers against Brat and Pomona

 

immunity is serovar specific

 

question

 

 

 

Lepto

answer

Vaccination titers lasts for 60-120 days ex. w/repeated vacc

titers to multiple serovars

 

2-way products--> canicola, Icterhaemorrhagiae

4-way producs --> canicola, icterohaemorrhagiae, groppotyphosa, pomona (whole-cell, adjuvant, unadjuvant)

 

initially 2 doses required, yearly for most dogs

every 6 months for high risk dogs or evironments

question

 

 

 

Lepto

answer

Bovine

 

common: hardjo, pomona, grippotyphosa

 

occasional: icterohaemorrhagiae, canicola, bratislava

 

vaccines: whole-cell inactivated, alum adjuvant, 5 or 6 serovars, given before breeding

question

 

 

 

Lepto

answer

Dogs: supportive care, 'cillin' when they are sick, 'cycline' for 3 weeks as they recover

 

Cattle: tetracyclines and vaccine will stop abortion storms, long acting tetracycline, or tilmicosin for chronic infections (primarily hardjo)

question

 

 

 

Lepto

answer

Zoonotic

occupational exposure--> in lab, working with animals, agriculture workers, handling body fluids, care when washing out cages/runs, need a clinic plan in case of exposure

 

client education- vaccination of dogs/livestock, care when handling urine, realistic risk assessment, provide an information sheep

 

Recreational exposure- exposure to open bodies of fresh water, hunting

 

Increasing prevalence of lepto in companion animals

question

 

 

Spirochetes

answer

includes- treponema, borrelia, leptospira, brachyspira

 

Spiral motile gram negative bacteria with endoflagella located in periplasmic area between cell membrane and outer membrane

 

labile in environment, sensitive to dessication, require specialized media (can be grown in vitro)

question

 

 

 

Lepto

answer

Spirochete

 

found in aquatic envrionements, cause systemic infections in many species

question

 

 

 

 

Brachyspira

answer

Spirochete

 

intestinal some of which are importen pathogens in pigs (hyodysenteriae)

question

 

 

 

Borrelia

answer

spriochete

 

transmitted by arthropod vectors, cause systemic infections in many species

question

 

 

 

Genus Borrelia

answer

helical gram negative bacteria

corkscrew motility due to endoflagella

unique linear chromosome, multiple circular and linear plasmids

obligate parasites of vertebrate hosts --> do not survive well in envrionment

transmitted via arthropod vector

 

 

question

 

 

 

Borrelia burgdorferi

answer
causative agent of Lyme disease
question

 

 

 

Borrelia anserine

answer
causative agent of avian borreliosis
question

 

 

 

Borrelia burgdorferi

answer

first identified following cluster of arthritis in children

 

reported in humans, dogs, horses, cattle, and sheep

 

Reservoir: variety of small mammals, such as white-footed mouse, also deer, sheep, and other large mammals maintenance host for ticks. humans, dogs, horses are incidental hosts

 

Transmission: tick bites, Ixodes scapularis- eastern and central US, Ixodes pacificus- west coast

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Borrelia burgdorferi

answer

virulence factor

outer surface proteins (OspA-F)

is expressed in tick midgut and is required for adherence

 

during tick feeding, OspA is turned off and OspC turned on, which releases bacteria from tick midgut and help protect bacteria from complement mediated killing host

 

VIsE is a variable surface protein expressed in mammalian hosts, which continually alters its antigenic region to help evad immune response

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Borrelia brugdorferi

answer

Pathogenesis

transmitted into mammalian hosts by tick bites--> requires attachment and feeding for 48hrs --> multiply within the skin but spread then to bloodstream or migrate through tissues --> many symptoms likely to be due to immune responses, esp migrating polyarthritis

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Borrelia burgdorferi

answer

early infection: erythma migrans appear around bite with 3-30 days after tick bite (80% of people), persist for 3-4 weeks

 

can be isolated/identified in skin

classic "bull's eye" rash (erythema migrans) of lyme disease

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Borrelai burgdorferi

answer

dissemination stage- weeks to months following infection

 

spread hematogenously to additional body tissues

symptoms- fatigue, chills, fever, headache, muscle and joint pain, swollen lymph nodes, secondary annular skin lesions

 

nervous systme abnormalities can include numbness, pain, bell's palsy (paralysis of facial muscles), and meningitis (fever, stiff neck, and severe headache)

 

can be identified in bloodstream, joints, CNS

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Borrelia burgdorferi

answer

persistent infection

typically involves intermittent episodes of joint pain and swelling, usually in one ore more large joints and migratory pain to joints, tendons, muscle, and bone

 

generally do not see spirochetes in joint fluid - may be due to deposition of immune complexes

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Borrelia burgdorferia

answer

Clinical disease in dogs

about 5-10% of dogs develop clinical disease after exposure (2-6 months)

 

difficult to determine actual time of infection, since dogs do not develop erythema migrans (transient redness)

 

more severe in younger animals

 

clinical signs- fever, shifting leg lameness, swelling of joints, polyarthritis, lymphadenopathy--> responsive to antibiotic therapy at early stages but polyarthris may respond

 

Acute progressive renal failure can occur, protein-losing glomerulopathy associated with proteinuria, uremia, peripheral edema, vomiting, concurrent lameness, euthanized, no bacteria in kidneys

 

mild focal meningitis, but neuro signs not observed

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Borrelia burgdorferi

answer
although about 13-47% of cats in endemic areas have been found to be seropositive, no clinical sings of have been reported in naturally exposed cats
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Borrelia burgdorferi

answer

horses- many clinical signs have been attributed to disease but no produced experimentally

 

clinical signs frequently reported include low grade fever, stiffness, lameness in more than one limb, muscle tenderness, lethargy

 

both neurologic dysfunction and panuveitis reported

 

high fever, and limb edema have been reported but more likely due to concomitant infection with anaplasma phagocytophila (spread via same tick)

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Borrelia burgdorferi

answer
A 2 year old dog developed lameness in the right hind leg that persisted for 2 weeks and then disappeared.  Two weeks later, the dog developed lameness in the left hind leg. When examined, he had mild fever, was reluctant to walk, and the joints on the affected leg, as well as inguinal lymph nodes, were swollen and tender
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Borrelia burgdorferi

answer

Diagnosis

history of exposure to ticks in endemic area with clinical signs

Detection of organisms

culture (difficult and expensive) in specialized medium take 6+ weeks, rarely done

PCR detection of bactrial DNA in samples such as skin

immunolfuorescence or darkfield microscopy

Serologic diagnosis

demonstrates rising antibody titers, not confirmatory alone

ELISA and indirect FA tests using whole bacteria as antigens may have false positives with animals infected with other spirochetes

western blotting can differentiate Ab resposnes- time consuming and training (confirmatory)

solid-phase ELISA tests for VIsE protein- differentiates infected from vaccinated

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Borrelia burgdorferi

answer

Treatment:

tetracyclines - because they are effective against causes of similar clinical signs

acute disease- rapid improvement

chronic diease- prolonged therapy

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Borrelia burgdorferi

answer

Prevention:

acaricidal sprays, tick control

vaccines include whole cell bacterins and recombinant subunit vaccines

 

OspA vaccines stimular production of Abs that can kill bacteria in tick midgut after ingests blood

benefits of vaccinating are disputed

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Borrelia burgdorferi

answer

most frequently resported tick borne disease of humans in NA

 

dogs can act as transport hosts for infected ticks, exposing humans to risk of infection

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Staph aureus

answer

gram positive cocci clusters

 

pyogenic- pus forming

 

catalase positive, coagulase positive

 

beta-hemolytic on blood agar

 

Invasive and toxigenic

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Staph aureus

answer
major cause of mastitis in cattle and small ruminants
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Staph aureus

answer

causes:

 

skin infections, abscesses, wound infections, pneumonia, septicemia, osteoarthritis

 

scaled skin syndrome, toxic shock syndrome, exudative epidermis, food poisoning

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Staph aureus

answer

reservoirs: skin and anterior nares about 25% of all humans and animals

 

Transmission: mainly direct contact but also by direct injection, or aerosols

 

very common nosocomial pathogen in humans and animals

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Staph aureus

answer

adhesins- MSCRAMMS- fibronectin and collagen-binding proteisn, linked to cell wall peptidoglycan

 

anti-phagocytic surface molecules--> protein A binds immunoglobulins by Fc end, capsule

 

 

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Staph aureus

answer

Exotoxins:

multiple cytolysins/hemolysins (alpha, beta, gamma, delta - toxin, panton-valentine leukocidin)

 

exfoliating toxins

 

pyrogenic exotoxins = superantigen toxins, toxic shock syndrom toxin, enterotoxins

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Staph aureus

answer

Exoenzymes

spreading factors- degradative enzymes that break down host tissues and intracellular matrix, such as collagenase, hyaluronidase, proteases, DNase, staphylokinase (fibrinolysin), etc

 

Coagulase- activates thrombin, leads to conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin = forms fibrin clots around bacteria

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Staph aureus

answer

Pore-forming cytolysins

alpha toxin- lyses host cell membrane and kills host cells, toxic for neutrophils, important cause of localized tissue damage

 

panton-valentine leukocidin- toxic for neutrophils and macrophages, has been linked to severe necrotizing pulmonary and cutaneous disease and to community-aquired MRSA

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Staph aureus

answer

Exfoliating toxins

proteases that target the intercellular adhesion protein desmoglien, found only in the epidermis, and specifically destroy desmosomes that connect epithelial cells, causing separation of layers of epidermal cells

 

cause sloughing of skin around lesions such as boils or cause bullous impetigo

 

systemic infections can cause scalded skin syndrome, symptoms of toxic shock syndrome

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Staph aureus

answer

superantigen toxins

Enterotoxins- cause food poisoning, ingested as pre-formed toxin, very heat stable, trigger vomiting and abdominal pain, rapid onset due to intoxication not infection

 

Toxic shock syndrome toxin- superabsorbant tampons, toxin can cross mucosal barriers and spread systemically from localized infection, causes massive release of cytokines from T cells, leading to vascular leakage, shock and death, causes supersensitivity to other toxins like exfoliating toxins and endotoxin

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Staph aureus

answer

soft tissue infections--> boils, furuncles, carbuncles, other abscesses, impetigo, superficial dermatitis, wound infections

 

septicemia, osteoarthritis, pneumonia, toxinogenic disease, scalded skin syndrome = systemic effect of exfoliating toxin

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Staph aureus

answer

salt and acid tolerance- established in hair follicle or sebaceous gland or minor wound

 

alpha toxin or leukocidins- localized tissue necrosis, kill phagocytes that migrate to area, causing degranulation, toxic for skin, muscle, WBCs

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Staph aureus

answer

evasion of host immune system

main host defense is PMNs but it can evade

 

leukocidins and hemolysins act to kill phagocytic cells

 

Protein A inhibits phagocytosis and blocks antibody function, capsule inhibits phagocytosis

 

catalase helps resist oxygen-dependent phagocytic killing mechanisms

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Staph aureus

answer
A 10 year old harness horse with painful papules, pustules, edema, exudate, and crusting in areas under the harness
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Staph aureus

answer

Diagnosis: based initially on lesion appearance and location, time of year, pruritis, othe animals affected

 

culture of pus on blood agar or CNA or mannitol salt agar

 

hemolysis and colonial morphology on blood, growth and mannitol fermentation on MSA

 

gram stain and morphology

 

catalase and coagulase test

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Staph aureus

answer

Antibiotic resistance

major problem 90% resistant to penicillin

many often resistant to other classes except vancomycin and new oxazolidinones

resistant isolates now very common in many species

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Staph pseudointermedius

answer
A 2 yr old yellow labrador with dermatitis on the abdome, with multiple erythematous papules, pustules, exudate and crusting
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Staph pseduointermedius

answer

gram positive, pyogenic, coccus, catalse positive

 

coagulast positive, beta-hemolytic on blood agar

 

most common cause of canine pyoderma

also cats, rarely horses and cattle

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Staph pseudointermedius

answer

Reservoir: skin, mucosal areas of dogs, puppies aquired it from dams within 8 hrs after birth, normal flora

 

disease requires some distubance in host, wounds, or infections, immune dysfunction

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Staph pseudointermedius

answer

virulence factors

 

adhesins, anti-phagocytic surface molecules - protein A- binds immunoglobulins by Fc end, capsule

exoenzymes- spreading factors, coagulase

exotoxins- cytolysins, exfoliating toxin, superantigen toxins

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Staph pseudointermedius

answer

canine pyoderma

pyogenic or pus-producing skin infection

classification based on depth--> suface, superficial, deep

 

treat with beta-lactamase resistant cephalosporins or clindamycin

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Staph pseudointermedius

answer

diagnosis:

examination of skin scrapings

 

culture of pus on blood agar or CNA or mannitol salt agar

hemolysis and colonial morphology on blood, growth and mannitol fermentation on MSA

 

gram stain morphology, catalase and coagulase test

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staph pseudointemedius

answer
skin infection that can be aquired from canine pets, especially incases of deep pyoderma
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Corynebacterium Pseudotuberculosis

answer

gram positive, rod, catalase positive, small zone beta-hemolysis on blood agar

 

Reservoir: infected animals and organisms in soil, pastures, facilities, shearing tools, etc, contaminate with bacteria, long term survival in soil

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Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer

Ovis: non-nitrate reducing

 

causes caseous lymphadenitis in sheep and goats

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Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer

equis: nitrate reducing

 

causes ulcerative lymphangitis in horses and cattle

question

 

 

 

Coynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer

Transmission:

 

in sheep and goats- primarily due to small wounds such as shearing wounds

 

In horses and cattle- mainly due to insect bites and skin wounds

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Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer

virulence factors

phospholipase D (Pld) an exotoxin that degrades mammalian cell membranes, is leukotoxic, and can damage endothelial cells and promote spread from initial site of infection to regional lymph nodes and visceral organs

 

cell wall is distinctive, with arabinogalactan and corynemycolic acid components- chemical composition enables organism to resist being killed in a phagolysosomes within macrophages and trigger granluomatous infection

 

facultative intracellular pathogen with ability to survive and multiply within phagolysosomes

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caseous lymphadenitis

answer

one of most important bacterial infections of small ruminants - sheep and goats worldwide

 

major economic importance- decrease yield of wool, meat, increased culling, thin ewe syndrom, condemnation at slaughter

 

chronic abscessation of peripheral lymph nodes (may be in visceral lymph nodes)

 



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Caseous lymphadenitis

corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer

pathogenesis:

enter through small wounds--> multiply --> trigger inflammatory response and influx of first PMNs then macrophages --> phagocytized, survive, carried to lymph nodes --> multiply tigger granulomatous response --> classic lesions

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Caseous lymphadenitis

answer

animals chronically infected

 

endemic areas adult animals may have lesions with no clinical signs

 

visceral abscesses occura and lead to thin ewe syndrome

 

abscesses rupture and drainage can contaminated environment

question

 

 

 

Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer
several adult goats, on MI farm have swellings of the superficial lymph nodes of the head, throat, chest and flank regions
question

 

 

 

Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer

Diagnosis:

based initially on lesion appearance, which is considered diagnostic in herds with history of CLA

 

Confirmation:

culture pus

gram stain and cell morphology

hemolysis pattern with synergistic hemolysis with Rhodococcus equi and inhibition of Staph aureus  beta-hemolysis (reverse CAMP test)

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Corynebacterium  pseudotuberculosis

answer

Treatment

drainage or surgical removal of abscess, decontamination

pus collected and burned

quarantine affected animal

antibiotics don't work well but combo of erythromycin and rifampin for 4-6 weeks has been suggested

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Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer

Control:

eradication extremely difficult- culling of serologically positive animals

If herd is free, extreme care should be taken to keep it that way

vaccines available-bacterins and pld toxiod

management CRITICAl

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Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer
human lymphadenitis caused by this organism mainly in owners/handlers, slaughterhouse workers, and vets
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Ulcerative lymphangitis

answer

worldwide, US mainly southwest during dry season

 

associated with insect vectors

 

external abscess most common forms- primarily in pectoral region and along ventral midline of abdomen, lg amounts of pus, encapsulated, severe edema

 

limb swelling, cellulitis, draining tracts following lymph vessels

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Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

pigeon fever

answer
A 4 year old gelding on a MI farm has severe swelling of the chest area, pain on palpation, and lameness
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corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer

Diagnosis:

clinical presentation

culture, gram stain, cell morphology

 

hemolysis pattern with synergistic hemolysis with Rhodococcus equi and inhibition of S. aureus beta-hemolysis (reverse CAMP test)

 

Serology- synergistic hemolysis inhibition test for Abs against pld, difficult to distinguish active infection from exposure or convalescence

question

 

 

 

corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer

Treatment:

external abscesses- drainage of abscess, decontamination

pus collected and burned

internal abscesses require long term antibiotic therapy, generally rifampin plus another antimicrobial

 

Ulcerative lymphangitis- treat early and aggressively, oral rifampin and IV cephalosporin, till improves, then trimethoprim-sulfa and/or rifampin fro 4-6 weeks

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Mycobacterium bovis

answer

phagocytic cells, such as macrophage:

 

pathogens are engulfed into phagosome and survive by blocking killing mechanisms, such as oxidative burst and maturation and/or acidification of phagosomes

question

 

 

 

Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

answer

Prevention/Control

 

vaccines are available for small ruminants but not tested for efficacy in horses

strict insect control critical

proper sanitation to reduce spread to other horses

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Genus Clostridium

answer

large gram positive spore-forming rods, anaerobic

 

Reservoirs: soil and gastrointestinal tracts of animals

 

Transmission: wound contamination or ingestion

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Genus Clostridium

answer

Endospores

specialized structures that are highly resistant to advers conditions

 

produced under nutrient limitation or other stress

 

sporulation= formation of spore from vegetative cell = complex developental process require regulatory cascade

 

exotoxins are key virulence factors

 

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Clostridium perfringens A

answer

causes gas gangrene and myonecrosis in warm-blooded animals

 

alpha toxin and perfringolysin

 

endospores enter into tissue by injury (punture or injections) which causes sufficient damage to tissue and blood supply (anerobic atmosphere)

 

multiply, produce toxins, local tissue destruction

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Clostridium perfringens A

 

answer

growth of bacteria produces gas, emphasematous/crepitant appearance

 

hemorrhage, edema, tissue necrosis, with gas

 

death from toxemia and/or septicemia

 

gas gangrene caused by one of several species, this being the most common

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Clostridium perfringens A

answer

Diagnosis:

based on history of recent IM injection, penetrating injury, plus gross pathology and histopathology

 

gram positive bacteria isolated using anaerobic culture, fluorescent antibodies

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Clostridium perfringins

answer

five types defined on presence or absence of 4 different toxins

 

alpha, beta, epsilon, lota

 

A, B, C, D, E

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alpha toxin

answer
phospholipase C or lecithinase, lethal, necrotizing
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beta toxin

answer
pore-forming cytolysin
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Epsilon toxin

answer
increases permeability of epithelial and endothelial cells
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Lota toxin

answer
AB subunit toxin that ADP-ribosylates actin within host cells, causing disorganization of cytoskeleton and death of cell
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perfingolysin

answer
a cholesterol-binding pore-forming cytolysin that kills host cells
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Clostridium perfingens A

answer
alpha toxin, perfringolysin causes gas gangrene and enterotoxemia
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Clostridium perfringens B

answer
alpha, beta, epsilon, perfringolysin causes enterotoxemia in newborn lambs ("lamb dysentery")
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Clostridium perfringens C

answer
alpha, beta, perfringolysin causes enterotoxemia in newborn calves, foals, piglets, lambs
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Clostridium perfingens D

answer
alpha, epsilon, perfingolysin causes enterotoxemia in older lambs, goats, calves = "pulpy kidney disease"
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Clostridium perfringens E

answer
alpha, iota, perfringolysin rare enterotoxemia
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Clostridium perfringens A

answer
Thirty-six hours after IM injection with ivermectin, a 7 year old quater horse mare developed abdominal pain which was not relieved with penicillin and banamine. Twelve hours later, the mare was depressed anorexic, sweating profusely, and pawing the ground.  The left cervical regions where she had been injected had marked crepitant swelling and was hot and painful to the touch in some areas and cold in others.
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Clostridium perfringes A

answer

Treatment

immediate very high dose of penicillin, with possible addition of rifampin or metronidazole

 

myotomy and fasciotomy to allow drainage and debridement of necrotic areas and oxygenation of tissues

 

hyperbaric oxygen if available, or infusion of oxygen into tissues

question

 

 

 

Clostridium

answer

control

vaccines that elicit antibodies that neutralize toxins

 

bacterin and toxoid and combo vaccines are available

 

 

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Clostridium tetani

answer

an acute toxemia that affects almost all mammals, horses and humans suceptible, dogs/cats/birds relatively resistant

 

major symptom - spastic paralysis

 

major virulence factor - tetanospasmin

 

AB subuint exotoxin

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Clostridium tetani

answer

B subunit - binds to gangliosides on CNS neurons

 

A subunit - zinc-dependent matalloprotease that cleaves synaptobrevins (proteins found in synaptic vesicles of neurons) essential for release inhibitory neurotransmitters  - GABA

 

leads to unregulated excitatory synaptic activity in  motor neurons, resulting in spastic paralysis

 

toxin binding is irreversible, recovery depends on whether new axonal terminals form

 

spastic paralysis

question

 

 

 

Clostridium tetani

answer

Pathogenesis

reservoir: bacteria in GI tracts of humans and animals, spores in soil (persistent)

 

Transmission: injection of spores into a deep traumatic wound

 

tissue necrosis and anoxia environment for germination, growth and production of toxin

 

toxin spreads systemically by retrograde transport up nerve fibers to CNS or via bloodstream

 

early signs muscle stiffness accompanied by muscular tremor and increased responsiveness to stimuli

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Clostridium tetani

answer

trismus= spasm of jaw muscles with resitriction of jaw movement and inability to eat

 

grinding teeth, retraction of third eyelid, erect ears, unsteady straddling gain with tail head out stiffly, anxious expression

 

severe muscle spasms and convulsiosn

 

death caused by paralysis of respiratory muscles

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Clostridium tetani

answer

infected cats...from bite wounds do not seem to develop full systemic disease, instead symptoms are apparent mainly in limb where the bite wound is located

 

particularly a problem in neonates, including humans, foals, lambss

 

can occur due to infection of the umbilicus, castration, or docking

question

 

 

 

Clostridium tetani

answer
Two weeks after being stabbed in the stifle with a piece of wire, a 4 yr old horse began walking stiffly, with an unsteady, straddling gait and muscle tremors, and was very jumpy.  The horse had an anxious expression, with stiff erect ears, prolapse of the third eyelid, and dilation of the nostils. Over the next few days, the muscle tremors developed a "sawhorse" stance, with tail extended and stiff.  The horse went down, could not rise, and developed more pronounced muscular spasms and convulsions.  The horse had not received standard vaccinations.
question

 

 

 

Clostridium tetani

answer

Diagnosis

mainly based on the clinical signs and a history of recent trauma in unvaccinated animals

 

can attempt culture of organism from wound or assay of toxin from bloodstream (difficult)

 

differential - fully developed is clinically distinctive

early stages confused with meningitis, encephalitis, sarcocystis, rabies, strychnine poisoning, myositis, acute laminitis in horses

question

 

 

 

Clostridium tetani

answer

Prevention

vaccination toxoid, inactivated but still immunogenic toxin protein.  given routinely to horses, humans initially 2 doses followed by regular boosters

 

vaccine provides long-lasting protection but immunity takes 7-10 days after 2nd shot

 

antitoxin provides protection in 2-3 hrs but only lasts 2-3 weeks

question

 

 

 

Clostridium botulinum

answer

acute intoxication acquired by pre-formed toxin

 

major symptom - flaccid paralysis

 

Major virulence factor - toxin

 

most potent toxin known in nature, with estimated lethal dose less than 1 mg

 

AB subunit exotoxins

question

 

 

 

Clostridium botulinum

answer

AB subunit leads to lack of excitation of motor neurons, resulting in flaccid paralysis

 

toxin binding is irreversible, so recovery depends on whether new axonal terminals form

 

Multiple types of toxin A-G found in different geographic areas

 

cattle and sheep are more sensitive than horses > birds and poultry > mink and ferrets

 

uncommon in dogs and pigs- no natural cases in cats

question

 

 

 

Clostridium botulinum

answer

Reservoir: spres can be found in soil, ponds, lake sediments

 

Transmission: ingestion of food contaminaed with preformed toxin

 

most commonly seen in infant - shaker foal syndrome

 

ingested toxin is absorbed via the intestinal tract and reaches neuromusclar junction target via bloodstream

 

at neuromuscular junction B binds to cell surface receptors and triggers endocytosis of A subunit which degrades synaptobrevina required for release of acetylcholine--> flaccid paralysis

question

 

 

 

Clostridium botulinum

answer

Clinical Signs

early muscle tremor

progressive symmetrical weakness developing into motor paralysis--> recumbency

head turned into flanks

mydriasis (dilation) ptosis (drooping)

dysphagia, drooling, weak tongue retraction, facial muscle paresis

rumen stasis, bloat

atonic bladder- loss of urination

sensation of consciousness retained until death

limberneck in birds- paralyzed unable to walk

birds are sentinel species

question

 

 

Clostridium botulinum

answer

Sources of toxin

spoiled stored silage or grain - B

silage made using poultry litter or products - C

phosphorus deficiency in cattle leading to pica, esp ingestion of bones or carcasses - C

carcasses baled or chopped into hay - C

question

 

 

 

Clostridium botulinum

answer
A holstein dairy herd in the central Valley of California lost 80 of 441 cows on 1 morning mid-April 1998.  Cows died after having developed signs of weakness, ataxia, recumbency, and watery diarrhea.  Many of the remaining animals were on the ground in sternal recumbancy with the head turned in to the flank, or were completely recumbent on their sides.  Over the next 14 days, 427 of the animals died. Investigation found that the animals had been fed a load of total mixed ration that included a rotten bale of oat hay containing a dead cat.
question

 

 

 

Clostridium botulinum

answer

Diagnosis

mainly based on clinical signs

definitive is demonstration of toxin in serum, intestinal contents, feed, by ELISA ro mouse bioassay

demonstration of spores in feed

Differential - other causes of neurologic dysfunction in lg animals, including EPM  and encephalitis in horses, tick paralysis in ruminants, and various poisons, milk fever etc.

question

 

 

 

Clostridium botulinum

answer

Treatment

neutralize residual toxin with antitoxin

provide supportive care to maintain hydration and nutrition

mortality 10-65 in cattle%

 

Prevention

good husbandry to maintain quality feed and reduce rodents

vaccination with toxiod

question

 

 

 

Streptococcus equi

answer

gram positive, coccus in chains, catalase negative

 

beta hemolytic, Lancefield group C

 

strangles - highly contagious infection of upper respiratory tract and lymph nodes

question

 

 

 

Streptococcus equi

answer

M protein (SeM)

major surface antigen, highly conserved

anti-phagocytic

multiple domains with different functions

acts as adhesion

binds to fibrinogen and IgG, impedes complement deposition and thus phagocytosis

loss of SeM results in loss of virulence

Fibronectin binding proteins, pili

question

 

 

 

Strep equi

answer

Extracellular proteins

pore-forming cytolysin/hemolysin

can lyse RBCs, leukocytes, platelets, responsible for beta-hemolysis

several superantigen toxins

exotoxins that contribute to high fever, symptoms

extracellular enzymes

streptokinase= fibrinolysin, spreading factors such as hyaluronidase, DNase,

question

 

 

 

Strep equi

answer

Reservoir:  infected horse and asymptomatic carrier, carried in nasopharyx

 

Transmission: aerosol or direct horse-to-horse contact with purulent nasal discharge, or with housing, water sources, feed and feed utensils, tack, and other fomites contaminated with nasal discharge, including clothing of handlers

 

can affect horses of any age, more common and more severe in younger horses

 

bacteria enter by mouth or nose and attach to crypt cells of tonsils

question

 

 

 

Strep equi

answer

bacteria penetrate to lamina propria of tonsils --> tiggers massive influx of PMNs, which fail to kill bacteria --> multiply and toxins kill PMNs  and large amounts of pus develop in tonsil area

 

first clinical signs is rapid increase in rectal temp of 103 or higher - associated with release of pyrogenic exotoxins into bloodstream

question

 

 

 

Strep equi

answer

anorexia, depression

bilateral mucopurulent nasal dicharge, acute swelling with subsequent abscess formation in submandibular and retropharyngeal lymph nodes--> hot, swollen, painful, dyspnea due to pharyngeal compression

 

eventually lymph nodes rupture and drain

question

 

 

 

Strep equi

answer

Immune mediated complications

purpura hemorrhagica- aseptic necrotizing vasculitis with subcutaneous edema and petechiation of MM

rare but serious, due to deposition of immune complexes in blood vessel walls with M protein (critical antigen), severe edema of head and legs, sloughing of skin

 

Glomerulonephritis and mycarditis- development of cross-reactive antibodies cause damage to heart muscle and deposition of immune complexes in kidneys

question

 

 

 

Strep equi

answer
A 3 year old horse developed high fever, mucopurulent nasal discharge, and severely swollen intermandibular and pharyngeal lymph nodes 6 days after returing from a horse show.  Over the next two weeks, several other horses in the stable developed similar symptoms.
question

 

 

 

Strep equi

answer

Diagnosis

gram stain and culture

PCR to detect the SeM gene in isolates

Serology demonstrating high serum antibody titer to SeM

 

Treatment

isolation of infected animals, systemic administration of penicillin

local treatment of abscesses (drainage)

implement hygiene measures

purpura hemorrhagica requires cortocosteroids and supportive care

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

answer

small gram, negative pleiomorphic rods, catalase negative

 

facultative anaerobes, require added CO2, PIGS

 

15 serotypes base on antigenic differences in capsular polysaccharides 1,5,7 most common

 

causative agent of contagious pleuropneumonia in pigs worldwide

 

will not grow on blood agar alon or MacConkey agar

requires NAD for growth = V factor

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

answer
question

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

answer

on blood, will "satellite" around colonies or a streak of S. aureus

 

will only grow on soy agar if V factor is available

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

answer

reservoir: tonsils and nasopharynx of infected pigs and carriers, strictly pig pathogen

 

Transmission: direct contact via infected nasal secretions or aerosol

 

Most common in feeder pigs 2-6 mo

moving and mixing of pigs increases risk

 

requires factor V for growth

 

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

answer

Virulence factors

pore forming cytolysins of the RTX toxin type

hemolysins/cytolysins that lyse RBCs and are toxic for porcine macrophages and neutrophils and lung tissue

bind to CD18 most active against spcific species

Capsular polyasccharide

antiphagocytic, important protective antigen, LPS, pilus adhesins, iron-binding proteins, resistance to oxidative stress

 

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuroneumonia

answer
bacteria through nares--> colonize tonsils or lung --> adhesins adhere to tonsil/lung tissue --> scarce nutrients --> acquire iron --> LPS stimulates inflammatory response --> capsular polysaccharide enables resistance to phagocytosis and clearance
question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuroneumonia

answer

Apx toxin kills neutrophils and lung tissue

lung lesions, edema, capillary congesion and multiplication of bacteria, necrotizing, hemorrhagic, fibrinous pleuritis

 

rapid deep breathing, minimal cough, fever, stop eating/drinking, depression, dyspnea, cyanosis, bloody frothy discharge, necrotizng hemorrhagic pneumonia, pulmonary edema, vascular thrombosis, loss of architecture, pleuritis

 

moratility 10% on one day

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuropneumonia

answer

peracute: death within a few hourse from sever dyspnea and progressive cyanosis of entire body

 

Acute: high fever, severe resp distress, cyaosis, dyspnea, coughing, anorexia, die within 2-4 days, chronic carriers

 

chronic: resolved/fibrosed pulmonary lesions, intermittent cough, decreased appetite, decreased weight gain

 

pigs 2-6 months most susceptible

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

answer
A farmer who raises feeder pigs found many of his young pigs ill one morning, although they had all been fine the night before.  The most severely ill were recumbent, with high fevers (106-107F), elevated respiratory rates (80-100 bpm), and dyspnea, and would not move even when he touched them.  Many of these pigs were coughing, thumping, open-mouth breathing and dog-sitting.  some had a bloody nasal discharge and their noses and ears were tinged blue.  Other pigs initally had milder symptoms that became progressively worse.  Many of the affected pigs died within 24-36 hours and othe became ill.  The farmer mentioned that he had recently added several new pigs from a different source to the herd
question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

answer

Diagnosis

initially clinical signs and gross pathology

culture from lung lesions at necropsy, serotyping

culture from tonsils from carrier pigs, selective medium

ID with biochem tests (ApxIV, OmlA genes) and PCR

 

Serodiagnosis

used to evaluate immune status of herds

Gold used to be complement fixation test

(difficult low sensitivity)

ELISA, hemolysin neutralization assay

problems with cross-reacting Abs

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae

answer

Treatment

mass treatment of herd

give Abs parenterally (SQ or IM)

determine antimicrobial susceptibility of isolate, resistance common

penicillin, cephalosporins, tetracycline

 

Prevention and Control

control by management- all in, all out strategy

contol by eradiaction- good biosecurity

control by vaccination-  humoral immunity (Apx toxins)

 

feeder pigs..pleuritis

question

 

 

 

Manheimia Haemolytica

answer

small gram negative, pleiomorphic rods, catalase negative

 

facultative anaerobes, grow on macConkey agar requires added CO2

 

cattle and other ruminants

 

two biotypes- A & T, based on fermentation of arabinose or trehalose, 17 serotypes based on capsular polysaccharides

 

causative agent of pneumonic pasteurellosis "shipping fever"

question

 

 

 

Manheimia Haemolytica

answer

Reservoir: upper respiratory tract of ruminants

 

Transmission: often endogenous inhalation of bacteria from upper respiratory tract, under stress, from animal-to-animal by direct contact or aerosols

 

Virulence factors:RTX leukotoxin, LktA specific for bovine/ovine leukocytes (bind CD18), capsular polysaccharides, endotoxin, pilus adhesins, iron-binding outer membrane proteins

question

 

 

 

Manheimia haemolytica

answer

bacteria in lungs --> LPS stimulates inflammatory response, neutrophils migrate --> resist phagocytosis and clearance (capsular polysaccharide) --> Lkt kills neutrophils and damages lung tissues

 

severe acute, necrotizing, hemorrhagic pneumonia, fibrinous pleuritis, after stress, listlessness and anorexia, fever, nasal discharge, shallow breathing, moist cough, dpression, ddyspnea, painful respirations

 

morbidity 35%, mortality 5-10%

question

 

 

 

Mannheimia haemolytica

answer
Several calves recently shipped cross-country to a feedlot became listless and uninterested in food within a week of arrival.  They became depressed, with drooped head and ears, and developed a thin nasal discharge that rapidly became thick and viscous.  All had fevers of up to 107F and raid, labored breathing.  They were reluctant to move and stood with head and neck extended and front legs spread with elbows away from the chest wall.  A third of the animals died within 3-4 days
question

 

 

 

Mannheimia haemolytica

answer

Diagnosis

clinical signs and gross pathology

cultures

biotype A serotype 1 most common in cattle, also in sheep

 

Treatment

start very early- ceftiofur, enrofloxacin, tilmicosin, florphenicol

bacterin vaccines exise but not very good unless supplemented with Lkt

vaccinate 3 weeks before transport

question

 

 

 

Pasteurella multocida

answer

small gram negative coccobacilli

 

facultative anaerobes, required CO2 fro growth

 

bipolar on staining, NG on MacConkey

 

commensals of the upper respiratory tract, opportunisic pathogen

 

five serogroups A,B,D,E,F

question

 

 

 

Pasteurella multocida

answer

causes:

fowl cholera (A, F)

hemorrhagic septicemia of ungulates

atrophic rhinitis of pigs

bovine pneumonia

bite wound infections- normal oropharyngeal flora in c/d

question

 

 

 

Pasteurella multocida

answer

Atrophic Rhinitis

infectious progressive, severe and permanent and accompanied by poor growth

 

dermonecrotic toxin, and Rho activating toxin is and AB toxin--> activates G proteins that activate Rho signaling pathways --> lead to turbinate bond degeneration, due to inhibiton of osteoblast, differentiation, and increase epithelial hyperplasia

question

 

 

 

Pasteurella multocida

answer
On a midwestern farm, many 3-8 week old suckling pigs were sneezing and snuffling.  Most had a nasal discharge, which was bloody in som animals, and many showed evidence of tear staining.  Weight gains in the affected pigs wer substantially lower than in apparently healthy pigs.  Some of the older pigs had malformation of the nose with twisting and shortening.
question

 

 

Pasteurella multocida

answer

Diagnosis

clinical signs and pathology at slaughter

culture from nasal swabs

demonstration of toxin produced by isolate by ELISA, or of toxin gene by PCR

 

Treatment

ASAP, all adult stock should be vaccinated with with PMT toxoid vaccine

sows vaccinated 4-6 weeks prior to each farrowing

weaned pigs medicated in-feed until clinical outbreak has subsided

long acting tetracyclines

question

 

 

 

Pasteurella multocida

answer

REPORTABLE infections

hemorrhagic septicemia

fatal acute speticemia, cattle/water buffalo

edema, swelling

prevalent in Africa, and Asia

last case in US 1968

bacterin vaccines are available

slaughter of all affected contact animals

 

Fowl Cholera

generally septicemia with high morbility and mortality, rapidly fatal

turkeys, geese, wild fowl

question

 

 

 

Bordetella bronchiseptica

answer

aerobic gram negative, coccobacilli, very small

 

obligate parasites of ciliated respiratory epithelium in humans, animals and birds

 

worldwide distribution

 

principle agent of canine infectious tracheobronchitis

most prevalent respiratory infections of dogs

question

 

 

 

Bordetella bronchiseptica

answer

Virulence Factors

adhesins- mediate adherence to ciliated cells of respiratory tract (fimbriae, filamentous hemagglutinin, pertactin)

Capsule

LPS- endotoxin, Long O antigen repeats hinder attachemnt of membrane attack complex

Exotoxins- tracheal cytotoxins, dermonecrtoic toxin (non-progressive AT), adenylate cyclase toxin (cAMP levels)

question

 

 

 

Bordetella bronchiseptica

answer

Reservoir: nasopharyngeal mucosa of dogs, other mammals

 

Transmission: direct contact with infected animals, aerosols, and fomites such as fod bowls

 

inhaled, attaches and replicates on ciliated cells of respiratory epithelium--> colonize nasal cavity, larynx, trachea, bronchi by adhesins such as fimbriae and filamentous hemaggltinin and pertactin

question

 

 

 

Bordetella bronchiseptica

answer
produces toxins that paralyze and kill ciliated cells and trigger excessive secretions and disrupt phagocytic function and thus clearance of bacteria --> increased mucous secretions, loss of ciliary activity, leads to coughing, nasal discharge, excessive mucous, honking cough, swollen tissues restricting airflow
question

 

 

 

Bordetella bronchiseptica

answer

Clinical Signs

paroxyms of harsh coughing followed by retching or gagging

white cell counts, temp generally normal

fever, purulent discharge, productive cough indicates progression to more severe disease- bronchopneumonia

high morbidity, low mortality

symptoms decreasse in 5 days and resolve in 2-3 weeks may persist longer

question

 

 

 

Bordetella bronchiseptica

answer

Diagnosis

clinical signs and history

tracheal wash collected, centrifuged and cultured on blood and MacConkey

 

Treatment

resistant to penicillins, cephalosporins

tetracycline drug of choice (antimicrobial sensitivity test)

antitussives with codien to relieve cough

vaccines- live avirulent IN

isolation of infected dogs

question

 

 

 

Bordetella bronchiseptica

answer
A young dog is brough to your clinic with a two day history of paroxysmal hacking cough, often accompanied by retching and runny discharge from nose and eyes.  The owner mentions that the dog spent several days at a kennel. A week ago while the owner was traceling and the symptoms began a few days after the dog returned home
question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae

answer

chronic enzootic pneumonia, mainly in young pigs, dry non-productive (peribronchial) cough common, fever, dyspnea, impaired growth with more severe disease

 

30-80% of all pigs have lesions at slaughter

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma hyosynoviae

answer
sporadic polyarthritis in young pigs
question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma hyorhinis

answer
sporadic polyserositis/polyarthritis in pigs <3 months old
question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma bovis

answer

chronic enzootic pneumonia

 

unresponsive pneumonia because it doesn't respond to standard first line antibiotics

 

feedlot calves

 

associated with arthritis

 

frequent component of bovine respiratory disease complex

 

no good vaccine

 

economic loss due to decreased weight gain

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma

answer

Diagnosis

culture is laborious, time-consuming, low sensitivity

isolation is not confirmation

 

Immunologic methods using specific antisera most commonly used- immunofluoresence and immunoperoxidase staining of histologic samples, ELISA

 

for some diseases, can use serology, such as complement fixation test, ELISA

 

Complement fixation test- serial dilutions, heat treat, inactivate complement, add Ag, add RBCs, antibodies present clear, if not pink due to RBC lysis

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma

answer

Treatment and Prevention

tetracyclines, macrolides, tilmicosin

NOT beta-lactams or vancomycin

 

vaccines available for bovis (live attenuated), hyopneumoniae (bacterin) --> provide short term immunity

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer

aerobic rods, gram positive better defined as acid fast

 

cell walls rich in complex lipids and mycolic acids

 

very slow growth

 

need complex egg-enriched media for growth, Lowenstein-Jensen

 

resistant to chemical treatments, disinfectants, drying but susceptible to heat treatment (pasteurization)

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer
tuberculosis mainly in cattle, also in humans, deer, badgers, cats, etc.
question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium avium subsp.
paratuberculosis

answer
Johne's disease in cattle, ruminants and deer
question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer

causative agent of bovine tuberculosis

 

incidence higher in dairy than beef cattle but also seen in goats, pigs, rare in sheep, horses

 

occurs worldwide

 

major cause of production loss due to chronic progressive nature of the disease

 

developed countries have testing and eradication programs

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer

Reservoirs: infected cattle, deer, other wildlife

 

Transmission: mainly via aerosols, ingestion requires significant higher dose, through milk to calves and humans, pigs from eating improperly processed carcasses

 

Key virulence factor is ability to survive and multiply within alveolar macrophages

 

no exotoxins or endotoxins

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer

cell envelope lipids and glycolipids and mycolic acids, such as mannose-liparabinomannan, which contributes to suruvival within macrophages and stimulate granuloma formation

 

specialized ESX-1 secretion system and effectors, also contribute to survival within macrophages

 

heat stable proteins such as tuberculin

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer

tuberculin and PPD (prurified protein derivative)

heat stable protein

mycolic acids- delayed hypersensitivity, contain infctions and causes lung damage

standard skin test for Tb measures delayed hypersensitivity

 

facultative intracellualr pathogen that multiplies within inactivated alveolar macrophages (can be killed by activated macrophage)

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer

Entry: bind to complement receptor CR3 and enters macrophage

 

Surival: prevents maturation of phagosome at early endosomal stage before it acidifies

 

Spread: continues to multiply until macrophage bursts or is killed, then infect other macrophages

 

often form granuloma in tuberculosis

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer

within alveolar macrophages a localized inflammatory response --> recruitment of monocytes --> building blocks for granuloma or tubercle --> granuloma- consists of infected macrophages surrounded by foamy macrophages and other monocytes, with mantle of lymphocytes and fibrous cuff of collagen and other matrix proteins

 

granuloma represents containment phase of infection- no overt signs of disease or transmission

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer

hypersensitivity to tuberculin - activated macrophages and cytokines limit further bacterial growth = latency

 

large doses of Ag can lead to tissue destruction and necrosis in and around granuloma

 

humoral antibodies develop but provide no significant protection

 

loss of condition, weakness, varialbe appetite, intermmittent fever, wet cough, dyspnea, mastitis , enlargement supramammary lymph nodes

 

only see clinical signs in advance disease

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer
Several cows in a dairy herd in MI showed significant weight loss and reduced milk production over several monthes.  All had capricious appetites, fluctuating low grade fevers, and rough hair coats.  They became progressively weak and emaciated and developed a chronic, wet cough especially upon exertion.  Several had swollen lymph nodes in the neck and ches
question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer

Diagnosis

Ante-mortem- tuberculin test

in cattle- monitor herds in eradication efforts

measures delayed hypersensitivity reaction to tuberculin

Inject PPD intra-dermally 1-3 days to migrate/respond

positive - indicates infection at some time

negative - never been exposed

single intradermal/comparative intradermal

 

Post-mortem

classic lesions, acid fast stain of tissues from lesions, culture --> ID colonies with DNA probe or PCR techniques

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium bovis

answer

Treatment and Control

inappropriate in control programs, positive --> slaughtered

have achieved erradication in many countries

wildlife reservoirs are major obstacles to eradication

vaccine for humans- live attenuated

BCG = bacillus Clamette-Guerin

relative protection, work in progress

 

Zoonotic- spread mainly via unpasteurized milk

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus suis

answer

gram negative pleiomorphic rod

 

normal flora of upper respiratory tract in pigs

 

causes septicemia, meningitis, arthritis, bronchopnemonia in young pigs under 3 months

 

in high health herds can cause disease in any age

 

clinicals signs: fever, prostration, respiratory distress with occasional arthritis

 

no commercial vaccines

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma hyorhinis

answer

sporadic polyserositis/polyarthritis in pigs <3 months old

 

fever, labored breathing, lameness, swollen joint

 

serofibrinous pleurisy, pericarditis, pertonitis are seen as well as serosanguinous synovial fluid in joints

 

high morbidity, low mortality

 

common inhabitant of respiratory tract in pigs

question

 

 

 

Mycoplasma hyosynoviae

answer

sporadic polyarthritis in young pigs 10-30 weeks of age

 

transient lameness, usually without fever

 

on necropsy, serosanguinous synovial fluid in affected joints

 

high morbidity, low mortality

 

common inhabitant of respiratory tract in pigs

question

 

 

 

Haemophilus parasuis

answer

gram negative pleiomorphic rod, requires V factor for growth

 

normal flora of upper respiratory tract and tonsils of pigs

 

Causes Glasser's disease = polysersitis and leptomeningitis in weaned pigs but to 12 weeks

 

sporadic disease of young swine compromised by stress, like weaning or transport

question

 

 

 

Haemophilus parasuis

answer

fever, depression, anorexia, dyspnea, lameness, pain (evidenced by squealing), lateral recumbency, cyanosis of ears and snout

 

If meningitis present- incoordination, tremors, convulsions

 

Necropsy: serofibrinous to fibrinopurulent exudate on serosal surfaces (pleura, pericardium, peritoneum), joints, meninges

 

bacterin vaccines available

question

 

 

 

Streptococcus suis

answer

gram positive coccus in chains, catalase negative

 

alpha hemolytic, Lancefield group D

 

causes: septicemia, meningitis, arthritis, bronchopneumonia, sporadic cases of endocarditis

 

found worldwide

question

 

 

 

Streptococcus suis

answer

Reservoir: tonsils and nasal cavities of asymptomatic carrier pigs

 

Transmission: from sows to their litters

 

Virulence factors: capsule, suilysin (hemolysin)

 

outbreaks most common in intesively reared pigs under stress

 

Clinical signs: fever, respiratory distress, tremors and seizures, lameness and swollen joints, neurological signs from meningitis

question

 

 

Streptococcus suis

or

Haemophilus parasuis

answer

Four dozen early weaned pigs were purchased and transported in cold spring in an open truck.  Wihtin a few days, more then half the pigs showed severe lameness and swollen joints as well as high fever, depression, and anorexia.  Many were recument or dog-sitting due to joint pain. Several showed muscular tremors, paralysis, and convulsions suggestive of meningitis.  Most untreated cases dies within 2-4 days and those that survived were stunted and lame

 

culture to confirm diagnosis

question

 

 

 

Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae

answer

gram positive small rods (acute disease) or filaments (chronic disease)

 

catalase negative, coagulase positive

 

pigs, turkeys, humans

 

 

question

 

 

 

Erysipelothrix rushiopathiae

answer

Reservoir: tonsils of healthy pigs also isolated from many other animals, poultry and wild birds

 

Transmission: bacteria shed in large numbers in feces; infection by ingesion of contaminated food or water,  or through skin abrasions

 

occurs in 4 forms

septicemia and cutaneous = acute

arthritis and vegetative endocarditis = chronic

question

 

 

 

Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae

answer

Acute Clinical Signs

sudden onset, high fever, sometimes sudden death

withdraw from herd, lie down and don't move

upon rising, squeal in pain, stiff, stilted gait, shifting, recumbency

post-exposure, develop characteristic raised "diamond skin" cutaneous lesions

question

 

 

 

Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae

answer

Chronic Clinical Signs

arthritis

cardiac insufficiency due to endocarditis

erosion of bone and proliferation of synovial tissue

question

 

 

 

Erhysipelothrix rhusiopathiae

answer

Diagnosis

age of pigs and clinical sings

culture and ID is critical

systemic- culture blood from live animals- joints, hear and meninges

question

 

 

 

Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae

answer
Many of the feeder pigs on a farm became acutely ill, with high fevers and severe lameness.  Examination of the lame pigs revealed enlargement of elbow, hip, hock, stifle, knee joint and joints were hot and painful. These pigs were often recumbent and would only rise if provoked.  They then, squealing in pain, moved in a stiff stilted gait and returned quickly to recumbency.  Some of the affected pigs also showed skin lesions which ranged from small light pink to purple raised areas to diamond shaped urticarial lesions with areas turning black and separating from the underlying raw surfaces
question

 

 

 

Strep suis

answer

grows on blood and chocolate agar

 

NG on MacConkey

 

hemolytic, catalase negative

 

several epidemics in humans

question

 

 

 

STEC

answer
frequently carried asymptomatically in intestinal tract of cattle and other ruminants without causing edema disease
question

 

 

 

Haemophilus parasuis

answer

grows on chocolate or as satellite around S. aureus on blood

 

NG on MacConkey

 

requires v factor

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus suis

answer
growth on blood, chocolate, Mac
question

 

 

 

Erysipelas rhusiopathiae

answer

growth on blood

 

NG on MacConkey

 

catalase negative, coagulase positive

 

causes infections in humans

question

 

 

Erysipelas

treatment

answer

penicillin, tetracycline

 

not effective once chronic lesions have developed

 

both live attenuated and bacterin vaccines available

question

 

 

Streptococcus suis

treatment

answer

penicillin

 

bacterin vaccine

question

 

 

Haemophilus parasuis

answer

penicillin, tetracycline

 

bacterin vaccine

question

 

 

 

Actinobacillus suis

treatment

answer

penicllin, tetracyclin

 

no vaccine

question

 

 

 

STEC

answer

produces vertotoxin = shigatoxin

 

AB subunit toxin

 

toxin produced in GI, absorbed into bloodstream and affects endothelial cells and CNS

question

 

 

 

ETEC

answer
entertoxigenic
question

 

 

ETEC

answer

Adhesins- Pili F4, F5, etc

 

Exotoxins- LT, ST

 

Pathology- hypersecretion, small intestine

 

Disease- watery diarrhea, often neonatal

question

 

 

 

STEC

answer

Adhesins- F18 fimbriae

 

Exotoxins- Stx, hemlysin

 

Pathology- invasion, colon

 

Disease- edema disease in pigs

question

 

 

 

ETEC

answer

neonatal diarrhea and septicemia in piglets, calves, lambs, less commonly in foals

 

post-weaning diarrhea in pigs

question

 

 

ETEC

answer

Reservoir: GI, contaminated soil, food, water

 

Transmission: by ingesion, or ubilical cord -- septicemia

 

bacteria ingested --> survive stomach --> colonize epithelial surface of small intestine (fimbrial adhesins) --> proliferate --> secrete enterotoxins --> trigger secretion of water and electrolytes --> severe watery diarrhea, dehydration, listlessness, metabolic acidosis, death (may occur before signs of diarrhea)

question

 

 

 

ETEC

answer

Calf scours

profuse yellow-white diarrhea that accumulates on the hind legs and tail, animals become dehydrated, lose weight and condition

 

severely affected calves die within a few days without treatment

question

 

 

ETEC

answer

Pig Neonatal Diarrhea

newborn pigs dying of neonatal diarrhea

 

distended intestins with fluid but no physical damage to the mucosa

 

fluorescent antibody staining with anti-F6 pilin demonstrates infection, yellowish fluorescent layer on top of the villi

question

 

 

ETEC

answer

Diagnosis

age of affected animals, clinical signs, duration of illness

 

culture of fecal specimen on Mac, also on blood

 

bright pink on Mac, oxidase neg

 

gram stain

 

PCR

question

 

 

 

ETEC

answer
Several newborn calves (1-5 days old) developed severe diarrhea, with watery yellow-white feces.  Their tails and hindquarters were soiled and the feces had an offensive, rancid smell.  The calves were weak, dull and listless, and had rough hair coats and loose skin.  Two of the most severely affectd aimals died within 24 hrs
question

 

 

 

ETEC

answer

Treatment

fluids and electrolytes to counter dehydration

Ab desired, should do susceptibility panel, since often resistant

 

Control

ensure newborns recieve colostrum, vaccination with pilus vaccines  or whole cell vaccines

breeding for disease resistance

question

 

 

 

STEC

answer

bacteria adhere to intestinal epithelial cells via F18 pili

 

toxin produced in GI is absorbed into bloodstream, damages endothelial cells and cause perivascular edema

 

sudden onset, edema of eyelids, and face, musclular tremors, paresis, leading to flaccid paralysis, death within 36 hrs

 

Necropsy- edema of stomach, colon, perivascular edema in CNS

question

 

 

 

Salmonella enterica

answer

Non-professional phagocytes, such as intestinal epithelial cells :

 

entry of pathogen-specified receptor-mediated endocytosis.  Bacteria trigger their own uptake into host cells

question

 

 

 

facultative intracellular pathogens need a means to evade killing by host cell

answer

escape from phagosome - listeria

 

distrupt maturation - mycobacterium, salmonella

 

survive with pagosome - coxiella

question

 

 

 

Salmonella enterica

answer

gram negative rod, ferment glucose, oxidase negative

 

does not ferment lactos, colorless colonies Mac, produces H2S

 

LPS in outer membrane and therefore endotoxin

 

motile, with peritrichous flagella

 

multiple antigenic types based mainly on O and H antigens , some also have capsular antigens

question

 

 

 

Salmonella enterica

answer

enterocolitis, with diarrhea with fecal leukocytes and sometimes blood, speticemia and systemic disease

 

broad host range

 

Reservoir: GI of many animals, water and food contaminated with fecal matter

 

Transmission: ingestion of contaminated food

question

 

 

 

Salmonella enterica

answer

requires significant infecting dose

 

Type III secretion system and invasion proteins

 

modify phagosome to permit multiplication with epithelial cells -> multiply -> exocytose into lamina propria -> taken up by macrophages

 

stimulate local inflammatory response

question

 

 

 

Salmonella enterica

answer

disease damages enterocytes by multiplication and inflammatory response

 

septicemic infection, conveys persistence in macrophage, which then transport bacteria to lymph nodes and through bloodstream

 

Clinical signs: enterocolitis, fever, depression, anorexia, colic/cramping, profuse diarrhea, dehydration, weight loss, abortion , severe in young animals

question

 

 

 

Salmonella enterica

answer

Septicemia

abrupt onset, high fever, depression, recumbency, enteric signs, very young animals

 

Diagnosis

culture on MacConkey, specialized medium for Salmonella- Hektoen enrichment broth

colonies will be colorless on Mac, oxidase negative, H2S positive

gram stain = gram negative

biochem tests plus serotyping

PCR

 

Necropsy: entercolitis with blood-stained luminal contents and enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes

question

 

 

 

Salmonella enterica

answer

A dairy herd with 100 cows, and 35 calves was affected by an outbreak of diarrheal disease characterized by profuse, fetid, blood-streaked diarrhea.  The affected animals exibited fever, anorexia, depression, and dehydration and become progressively weak.  Twelve of 20 affected cows and 2/7 affected calves died within 2-3 days and several pregnant cows aborted in late gestation.  All of the affected animals had eaten feed containing a new lot of bone meal.

 

two children on the farm developed fever, chil, bloody diarrhea, and abdominal cramps 2 days after consuming raw milk from the farm and required hospitalization

question

 

 

 

Salmonella enterica

answer

Treatment

fluids and electrolytes to counter dehydration

antibiotics generally not used except in foals to prevent septicemia

 

Control

live attenuated and bacterin vaccines to pregnant animals

vaccines do not give long term protection

biosecurity and reducing risk of exposure critical

careful disinfection after infected animals

question

 

 

Salmonella enterica

answer
A 4-year old standardbred stallion presented with acute onset of severe diarrhea of 8 hrs duration.  Fecal samples contained blood, fecal leukocytes and mucus.  History was unremarkable, and the horse had been in full training and racing at the local racetrack.  On clinical exam the horse was depressed, dehydrated, mildly colicky and mildly tachycardic but temperature was normal.  Venous blood gasses and electrolytes showed milkd metabolic acidosis with hyponatremia.  A CBC showed leukocytosis with a left shift and hyper-fibringenemia, which were both compatible with severe colitis.  The horse improved with treatment.  Unfortunatley, over the next few weeks, many other horses treated at the same vet hospital developed similar symptoms and 44 % of those affected died
question

 

 

 

Lawsonia intracellularis

answer

small curved gram negative rod, single polar flagellum

 

obligate intracellular pathogen- found in cytoplasm of intestinal crypt cells, can be grown in pig enterocytes

 

microaerophilic

 

causative agent of proliferative enteropathy of pigs and foals

 

pigs and foals recently weaned, or feeder pigs

question

 

 

 

Lawsonia intracellularis

answer

Reservoir: GI tracts of many animals, including pigs, horses, deer, canids

 

Transmission: ingestion

 

once in illeum bacteria attach to and enter enterocytes adhesins not yet identified

 

escape from phagosome and replicate in cytoplasm

question

 

 

 

Lawsonia intracellularis

answer

need actively proliferating and differentiating crypt cells to infect and cause disease (occurs at weaning)

 

bacteria may trigger proliferation of crypt cells, and inflammatory response

 

foals- diarrhea, hypoproteinemia, ventral edema, and ill-thrift, illeum proliferative enteropathy- thickened corrugated mucosa due to hyperplasia

question
[image]
answer

 

 

 

Lawsonia intracellularis

question

 

 

 

Lawsonia intracellularis

answer

porcine intestinal adenomatosis- non-hemorrhagic, diarrhea, failure to gain weight

 

Chronic necrotic enteritis- progressive emaciation, and chronic scours

 

proliferative hemorrhagic enteropathy - hemorrhagic form, severe bloody diarrhea

question

 

 

 

Lawsonia intracellularis

answer
necrotic enteritis-> yellow-gray cheesy masses that adhere tightly to mucosa
question

 

 

 

Lawsonia intracellularis

answer

Diagnosis

Pigs

histologic observation

silver stain or PCR demonstration of bacteria

serology, ELISA and IFA for antibodies

 

Horses

clinical signs, hypoproteinemia

serology, ELISA, IFA for antibodies

PCR

question

 

 

 

Lawsonia intracellularis

answer

Treatment

Pigs

tylosin or tiamulin prophylactically

 

Foals

IV oxytetracycline 1 w, followed by erythromycin for several weeks

 

Control

live attenuated vaccine

question

 

 

 

Lawsonia intracellularis

answer
Many of the 8-16 week old feeder pigs on a swine feedlot developed bloody scours or black scours.  The affected pigs had poor appetite and diarrhea that began as soft mucoid feces but progressed to mucohemorrhagic diarrhea.  Many of the severely affected pigs died, and were found lying in a puddle of blood-colored liquid feces.  Animals that survived were often stunted and unthrifty. 
question

 

 

 

Brachyspira (serpulina)

hyodysenteriae

answer
swine dysentery
question

 

 

 

Brachyspira (serpulina)

hyodysenteriae

answer

gram negative, motile, oxygen tolerant, anaerobic spirochete

 

beta-hemolytic on blood

 

found worldwide

question

 

 

 

Brachyspira hyodysenteriae

answer

Reservoir: found in the intestinal tract of clinically affected as well as normal pigs

 

Transmission: ingestion of food/water contaminated with feces

 

Virulence factors: motility- penetration through mucus into crypts, hemolytic activity

 

migrate through intestinal mucus, attach to epithelial cells, tigger production of excessive mucus

 

hemolysin and LPS involved in damage and inflammatory response

question

 

 

 

Brachyspira hyodysenteriae

answer

clinical signs

most common in weaned pigs 6-12 weeks

diarrhea, soft yellow-gray feces, anorexia, fever, watery diarrhea w/blood, mucus, flecks of white mucofibrious exudate, dehydration, emaciation, acidosis

lying in pool of bloody feces, too weak to rise

lesions confined to large intestine

question

 

 

 

Brachyspira hyodysenteriae

answer

Diagnosis

age, and clinical signs

microscopy or fluorescent AB detection of bacteria

anaerobic culture

 

Treatment- tylosin or tiamulin in water for treatment, feed for prophylaxis

 

Control- no good vaccines, biosecurity, antimicrobials

question

 

 

 

Clostridium perfringens

answer

produces wide varietty of toxins, divided into 5 types (A-E), with presence of 4 lethal toxins: alpha, beta, epsilon, iota

 

Nagler test for phopholipase activity: streak on egg yolk agar, and look for opaque area around streak, caused by degradation of lecithin, inhibited by anti-alpha-toxin

question

 

 

 

Clostridium perfringens

A

answer
gas gangrene, food poisoning, enterocolitis, hemorrhagic enteritis, necrotic enteritis
question

 

 

 

Clostridium perfringens

B

answer
lamb dysentery, enterotoxemia
question

 

 

 

 

Clostridium perfringens

C

answer
struck = acute enterotoxemia, hemorrhagic eneritis, necrotic enteritis, enterocolitis
question

 

 

 

Clostridium perfringens

D

answer
pulpy kidney disease
question

 

 

 

Clostridium perfringens

E

answer
bovine neonatal enterotoxemia
question

 

 

 

Pulpy kidney disease

answer

worldwide in lambs, kids, calves, and adult goats

 

prevalence <10%, close to 100% mortality

 

affected animals on high nutrient diets, large quantities of starch into small intestine, rumenal stasis

 

epsilon toxin penetrates through intestinal mucosa, spreads via bloodstream to brain, causes degeneration of vascular endothelium and edema in brain, and other organs

question

 

 

 

Pulpy kidney disease

answer

very rapid, fatal outcome

found dead with no symptoms

severe convulsions

dullness, depression, anorexia, green pasty diarrhea, staggers, sircling, convulsions, opisthotonus, death

hyperglycemia, glycosuria

question

 

 

 

Pulpy kidney disease

answer

Necropsy

soft pulpy kidneys

hemorrhage, edema, liquefaction in brain

pericardial sac filled with straw colored fluid

patchy congestion of intestinal mucosa

focal symmetrical encephalomalacia

 

Treatment: not practical


Prevention- reduction of food intake, administration of antitoxin, vaccination during pregnancy or outbreak

question

 

 

 

Lamb Dysentery

answer

worldwide but rare in US

 

affects lambs <1 week old

 

die with no signs, abdomina distension, severe abdominal pain, diarrhea, brown fluid feces, tenesmus, recumbency, death

 

Risk factor- unestablished normal flora, low proteolytic activity

 

Necropsy- hemorrhagic enteritis, focal necrosis, ulceration of small intestine

question

 

 

 

Neonatal Enterotoxemia

answer

C- piglets, B&C- calves, B-foals

 

bloody diarrhea, tenesmus, acute abdominal pain, depression, dehydration, neuro signs (B), more severe (C)

 

Necropsy: hemorrhagic enteritis, ulceration of mucosa, localized area of necrosis in illeum, peritonitis, blood in the lumen, gas evident

question

 

 

 

Necrotic Enteritis in poultry

answer

A, occasionally C, broilers up to 12 weeks

 

actue enterotoxemia- sudden, depression, diarrhea, reluctance to grow, death

 

Risk factors- concurrent infection, mucosal damage, diet high in wheat or barley rather than corn

 

Necropsy- necrotic mucosa of small intestine, villous necrosis, gas distention, large G+ rods, yellow pseudomembrane

question

 

 

 

Necrotic Enteritis in Poultry

answer
Twenty of 110 6-8 week old feedlot lambs on a Midwestern farm died suddenly over a 24 hr period.  The lambs had only recently arrived in the feedlot, and were fed a high grain ration.  Some of the lambs had diarrhea, and others showed incoordination, circling and staggering and convulsions before they died.  On necropsy, there was straw-colored fluid in th epericardial sacs and throacic cavities, degenerative changes in the brains, autolysis of the kidneys and patchy hemorrhages ont he intestinal mucosa.
question

 

 

 

Necrotic Enteritis in Poultry

 

answer

Diagnosis

clinical signs, suddent death

focal symmetrical encephalomalacia (D)

gram stains- G+ rods

culture (anaerobic) biochemical tests or PCR

ELISA

 

Treatment- hyperimmune serum

 

Control- vaccination

question

 

 

 

Clostridium difficile

answer

gram positive, anaerobic spore-forming rod

 

normal flora of intestin of people and animals

 

disease = antibiotic associated diarreha --> developes into pseudomembranous colitis

 

antibiotics disrupt normal flora and allow germination of spores

 

severe entercolitis

question

 

 

 

Clostridium difficile

answer

two toxins, enterotoxin and cytotoxin -> disruption of epithelial cytoskeleton, loss of tight junctions, cytokine release, and inflammation

 

plaques of fibrin, dead epithelial cells, mucus, inflammatory cells

 

diarrhea and fatal necrotizing enterocolotis, profuse watery diarrhea, dehydration, antibiotic induced disease

 

treatment- discontinue Ab and use vancomycin or metronidazole

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium avium subsp.

paratuberculosis

 

answer

aerobic rods, gram positive, better defined as acid fast

 

cell walls rich in complex lipids and mycolic acids

 

obligate pathogen, although can survive up to a year in contaminated soil- resistant to drying (cell wall glycolipids)

 

Causes Johne's, chronic, contagious, fatal enteritis

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium avium subsp.

paratuberculosis

answer

facultative intracellular pathogen that lives within intestinal macrophages

 

grows very slowly on enriched egg yolk agar, needs iron chelator, rough colonies

 

host range - true ruminants cattle, shee, goats, and deer as well as pseudoruminants- llamas, alpacas, and camels

 

question

 

 

 

Reservoir: intestines of infected cattle, goats, deer, etc. and soil contaminated with feces, may also be carried in carnivores and prey animals

 

Transmission: via ingestion, or in utero

 

Virulence factors: key-ability to survive and multiply within macrophages, cell envelope lipids and glycolipids and mycolic acids, mannos-lipoarabinomannan, granuloma formation, immune response to Map is critical, johnin-delayed hypersensitivity

 

answer

Mycobacterium avium subsp.

paratuberculosis

question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium avium subsp

paratuberculosis

answer

Pathogenesis:  younger animals


ingested--> bind and are phagocytosed (M cells in peyer's patches), requires Map --> transcytose when engulfed --> Map blocks maturation, survives, multiplies --> initally no evidence of disease (silent carriers) --> progresses to granulomatous reaction --> enteropathy thickened and corrugated large intestinee

question

 

 

Mycobacterium avium subsp

paratuberculosis

answer

silent, subclinical, non-detectable --> sub-clinical shedders --> clinical disease- visible symptoms --> end stage disease

 

reduced milk production, diarrhea- pea soup, weight loss, bottle jaw, premature culling, decreased fertility

 

increased incidence of mastitis

question

 

 

 

Mycobacteriu subsp. avium

paratuberculosis

answer
The owner of a 200 cow dairy herd in MI called the vet to investigate a diarrheal disease problem.  He had 2 cows with a history of chronic progressive diarrhea that had been worsening for several months.  Both cows were markedly emaciated, with sunken eyes and rough coats and submandibular edema, but had normal temps and appetities.  Both cows had reduced milk production, as did 6 others who appeared healthy but had intermittent diarrhea.
question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium avium subsp

paratuberculosis

answer
A small dairy goat herd had been maintained as free of both caseous lymphadenitis, and paratuberculosis for a dozen years.  The owner wanted to improve quality of her herd, and purchased a 3 mo old buck from a reputable breeder.  Two years later, she had two young goats show significant weight loss and reduced milk production over several months.  When one of these goats was euthanized and necropsied, there was severe illeal enteropathy and histopathology of the lesions showed many macrophages containing acid fast rods.
question

 

 

 

Mycobacterium avium subsp

paratuberculosis

answer

Diagnosis- Necropsy

gross and histopathology of intestinal lesions

granulomatous inflammation

detection of Map- culture  or PCR

detection of cell-mediated immmune response -> gamma interferon assay, hypersensitivity test

detection of antibody to Map- CF, ELISA, AGID

 

Treatment- not done

 

Control- screening, cull positives, vaccines (bacterin and live),

 

may be associated with Crohn's disease in humans

question

 

 

Listeria monocytogenes

answer
causes septicemia, encephalitis, and/or abortion in sheep, cattle, goats, pigs, dogs, cats, horses
question

 

 

Chlamydophil abortus

answer
causes abortion in sheep and other species
question

 

 

 

Brucella sp

answer
abortion in cattle, goats, sheep, pigs, dogs
question

 

 

 

Listeria monocytogenes

answer

gram positive, short rod, non-spore forming

 

highly motile, facultative anaerobe, catalase positive

 

beta-hemolytic on blood, CAMP positive

 

capable of growth at wide range of temps

 

facultative intracellular pathogen

question

 

 

 

Listeria monocytogens

answer

food born infection that can lead to bacteremia and systemic disase in many animals

 

encephalitis, late abortion, GI infection, septicemia

 

Reservoir: intestinal tracts of humans and animals, ubiquitous in environment in soil, water on plants = soil saprophyte; multiplies in poor quality, high pH silage

 

 

question

 

 

 

Listeria monocytogenes

answer

Transmission: ingestion, can be transplacentally infects fetus- tiggering abortion, during delivery- cause septicemia and meningitis

 

Virulence Factors:

Internalin A and B- suface proteins, zipper mech

Listeriolysin O- pore-forming cytolysin lyses phagosome

Phospholipases PlcA and PlcC- release baceria

ActA- actin-based motility

question

 

 

 

Listeria monocytogenes

answer

pathogenesis

bacteria ingested--> infect intestinal epithelial cells --> trigger uptake into cells (zipper) --> can become septicemia --> can also cross BBB --> blood brain barrier

 

can also cross placenta

 

2 major diseases : encephalitis, late abortion

question

 

 

 

Listeria monocytogenes

answer

encephalitis- migrate up cranial nerves, trigeminal, to brain to case microabscesses in brain stem

 

incoordination, lateral head tilk, facial nerve paralysis, drooping of ear/eyelid, tongue protrusion, excessive salivation, circling, head deviation, recumbency, drooling

 

Late abortion- GI bloodstream, placenta to fetus, systemic illness

 

 

question

 

 

 

Listeria monocytogenes

answer

disease most severe in neonates, elderly and immune-compromised, and pregnant women

 

Diagnosis: culture blood agar, cold enrichment,

 

Treatment- tetracyclines, Abs that can enter host cells

response poor in neural infection

 

control- good quality silage, live attenuated vaccines

 

Zoonotic- severe food-borne disease, pregnant women avoid unpasteurized milk or soft cheeses

question

 

 

 

Campylobacter fetus subsp.

venerealis

answer

causes bovine genital campylobacteriosis

 

venereal disease of cattle primarily in early embryonic death, infertility, protracted calving season and abortion

 

rare cause of abortion in sheep and goats

question

 

 

 

Campylobacter fetus subsp

venerealis

answer

Reservoir: genitalia of bulls, preputial and penile crpts and carrier cows, older bulls more likely to be infected, increased epithelial crypts provides microaerophilic conditions

 

Transmission: natural breeding or artifical insemination

 

Pathogenesis: campylobacter in cervicovaginal mucus --> endometritis and salpingitis during progestational phase --> early embryonic death and resorption --> transient infertility --> protective immunity, return of fertility

question

 

 

 

Campylobacter fetus subsp.

venerealis

answer

Clinincal Sign: bulls- none,  cows -> systemically normal, early embryonic death, prolonged luteal phase, irregular estrous, repeat breeding, protracted calving, observed abortion, herd-> low or marginally low pregnancy rates and increased rate

 

Diagnosis: detection of bacteria in sheath, mucus, fluorescent Ab, or PCR, culture, ID, ELISA

 

question

 

 

 

Campylobacter fetus subsp

venerealis

answer

Treatment

bulls- streptomycins systemically and topically

 

Prevention: vaccination (bacterin), before and during breeding season

question

 

 

 

Campylobacter fetus subsp.

fetus

answer

ovine genital campylobacteriosis

 

most common causes of ovine abortion worldwide

less frequent in goats and cattle

 

question

 

 

Campylobacter fetus subsp

fetus

answer

Reservoir: GI tracts many animals, genital tracts of infected ewes

 

Transmission: fecal-oral, NOT venereal

 

pathogenesis: ingestion --> multiply in GI --> localization in uterus and infection of uterin wall and placenta--> late term abortion, stillbirth, birth of weak lambs

question

 

 

 

Campylobacter fetus subsp

fetus

answer

Clinical signs: sudden abortion, vaginal discharge

 

Diagnosis: staining bacteria, fluorescent Ab test, culture, PCR, liver necrosis w. gray-white necrotic foci, exam of placenta

 

Treatment: chlortetracycline, isolation, remove and burn contamination, move flock to fresh pasture

 

Prevention: vaccination (bacterin)

question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila abortus

answer

causative agent of enzootic abortion of ewes

 

most common cause of abortion in sheep in US and worldwide, also goats and sometimes cattle.

 

gram negative, obligate intracellular pathogen with unique developmental cycle

question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila abortus

answer

MUST be grown in tissue culture, will not grow on standard media

 

developmental cycle: EB-elementary body infectious form, RB- replicative form

 

Reservoir: asymptomatic carriers in GI or genital tract

question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila abortus

answer

Transmission: ingestion of organism, shed in placenta and discharge, venereal, in utero, via ticks, or latent infected ewe

 

Pathogenesis: ingested EBs --> multiplication int tonsils or GI --> modulation of immune system --> infection of uterus, and placenta --> infection of trophoblast cells --> suppurative necrotic placentitis --> prevent normal transfer of nutrients--> fetal death and abortion

question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila abortus

answer

Clinical signs

late gestation abortion, dead or weak lambs, diseased afterbirth, vaginal discharge, usually in first pregnancy, develop protective immunity, persistent infection shed at estrus

 

Diagnosis

exam of placenta- necrotic cotyledon, thickened, edematous, exudate

culture, specific stains

serology with CF, ELISA

detection of bacteria and inclusion bodies by giemsa/iodine stain

confirmation fluorescent Ab staining or culture, or Ag detetction

question

 

 

 

Chlamydophila abortus

answer

Treatment: tetracyclines, or other drugs that can enter host cells, treate all pregnant ewe once any in herd abort

 

Control: isolate all aborted ewes, burn all placentas, clean areas where abortion occurred

 

Prevention: live attenuated vaccine administrated prior to breeding, inactivated vaccine can be used in pregnant animals

 

Zoonotic: serious for pregnant women, lead to develop abortion, stillbirth, pre-term labor, via oral rout

question

 

 

Chlamydophila abortus

or

Campylobacter fetus supsp. fetus

answer
On a local sheep farm, 3 weeks before lambing season; there was an abortion storm, with 30% of the ewes aborting in late gestation.  Many of the ewes had a mucopurulent vaginal discharge for several days before and after abortion.  Several ewes delivered immature lambs, and many full term lambs were weak and sickly. 
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