29. Marek’s disease. Flashcards

1
Q

History?

A
  • Mareks disease usually acute, lymphoproliferative/less frequently chronic, central nervous disease of chicken
  • History:
  • 1907: Marek - chronic form “mareks hen paralysis” = mild viral strain
  • neurolyphomatosis, polyneuritis
  • from 1950s acute form: visceral lymphomatosis = virulent strains, tumour formation
  • “acute form of mareks disease”
  • 1967 ʹ identification of the pathogen, the same agent causes the 2 diseases
  • 1969-1970 ʹ description of the pathogenesis, the 1st vaccines
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2
Q

Occurrence; worldwide?

A

Occurrence: worldwide,

  • practically in ever larger chicken farm
  • Visceral form
  • enzootic, neurological form
  • sporadic
  • In all factories
  • 1 day old chickens must be immunised before being let out of the hatchery!!!
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3
Q

Causative agent?

A

Causative agent:

  • Gallid herpesvirus 2 & 3 (GaHV-2 & 3) ʹ Alphaherpesvirinae, Mardivirus
  • GaHV2: Mareks disease virus serotype 1cause marek disease
  • Virulent strains: GHV-2 = MDV- 1
  • A) Very virulent: visceral tumours (can break through vaccination)(vvMDV)
  • B) Virulent: tumours, transient paralysis (vMDV)
  • C) Less virulent: chronic, mainly neurological (mild - mMDV)
  • D) Avirulent: subclinical infections
  • GaVH-3 Mareks disease virus serotype 2 apathogenic strains
  • (MeHV-1 ʹ turkey herpes: apathogen, vaccine strain)
  • (For vaccination the 3rd serotype is used & the turkey herpes virus is also used)
  • Propagation in embryonated eggs & in cell culture
  • Susceptibility: chicken, rarely turkey or other bird sp.
  • Resistance ʹ very high!!
  • In feather follicular epithelial cells & in dust 1 year!
  • In litter for about 4 months
  • Disinfection: halogenids, formaldehyde, (+detergents)
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4
Q

Epizootiology?

A

Epizootiology

  • (not a germinative infection)
  • Chickens are most susceptible in 1-2 weeks of age
  • Infection after 8 weeks of age: carry & shedding without clinical signs
  • Indirect & direct infections
  • Fomites (racks, boxes, vehicles)
  • Egg shell, hatching machine (Not real germinative!)
  • Air-borne (i.e. btwn stables)
  • Long-term carrier & shedder birds
  • Any farm where chicken are kept recently are potentially infected
  • Mainly airborne infections, rarely PO, in large-scale, crowded flocks it spreads easily
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5
Q

Factors influencing the enzootics?

A

Factors influencing the enzootics

  • The virulence of the strain
  • Genetic resistance (MHC dependent & MHC independent)
  • Gender (hens are more susceptible than roosters)
  • Immunological stage, maternal immunity, vaccination
  • Infectious dose (~keeping conditions, hygiene, crowded flock)
  • Simultaneous infections (CAV, IBDV, ALV, REV)
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6
Q

Course?

A
  • Course: always a chronic disease (never appears before 6 weeks ʹ rarely seen in broilers)
  • ” classical neurological form(hen paralysis) mainly in the legs
  • Low virulent strains
  • In growers & in (young) hens
  • Usually sporadic, long lasting (for months)
  • Recovery after the age of 1 year
  • Transient paralysis
  • More virulent strains
  • Usually in 6-7 weeks (16-18 weeks) old, non-vaccinated chicken
  • Sporadic, quick, transient recovery (within 24h)
  • May lead to visceral form
  • Acute, lymphoproliferative ʹ tumour formation all over body
  • In non-vaccinated flocks: after 6 weeks of age, en masse
  • In vaccinated flocks
  • Growers or in the beginning of laying, sporadic
  • Long-lasting disease in the flock; new case again
  • CNS signs may develop
  • Peracute, or anaemia ʹ in 5 week old chicken
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7
Q

Pathogenesis?

A

Pathogenesis

  • Free virons are produced only in the epithelial cells of the feather follicles & surface of skin
  • In the tissues direct transmission from cell to cell ʹ Ig cannot reach the virus
  • Virulent, very virulent strains ʹ oncogene in the lymphatic cells
  • Mononuclear cell tumours, mainly T cells
  • Specific antigens are expressed on the surface of certain cells: mareks disease associated
  • tumour surface antigen ʹ MATSA (not important anymore b/c diagnosed with PCR)
  • o In peripheral nerves
  • Lymphoid cell infiltration ʹ inflammation
  • Lymphoproliferative & autoimmune processes
  • Neurone damage ʹ paralysis
  • Immune response:
  • birds have to be vaccinated
  • Virus & tumour specific factors
  • Yolk immunity until about 3-4 weeks ʹ reduces but does not prevent infection
  • VN antibodies on 6-12 days after infection ʹ long persistence together with cell associated
  • viremia
  • Cellular immunity plays the central role in the protection
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8
Q

Clinical signs?

A

Clinical signs͗:

  • always chronic , dont see until 6 weeks
  • Incubation period: greatly varies
  • Acute, visceral form: 4-6 weeks 7-16 weeks or longer
  • Classical, neurological form: in 6-12 months of age
  • Earlier infection ʹ more serious disease
  • Peracute/anaemia: 3- 6 week old chicks
  • Acute, visceral form (significant economic losses)
  • Non-typical signs (loss of appetite, depression, anaemia, weight loss, death)
  • Very virulent: immunosuppression, more serious signs, higher mortality
  • In growers (after 7 weeks of age): skin tumours, nodules
  • Classical, neurological form (1-2% mortality, chronic) > 6 months
  • Weakness, ataxia, one-sided paralysis of the legs
  • Wing paralysis, craw paralysis, depression, convulsions
  • Eye lesions (mainly in older, rare): cloudy, reddish-greyish iris, irregular-shaped pupils, iris
  • adhesion, angular pupils , photophobia, keratitis, conjunctivitis, blindness
  • Recovery is exception or transien
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9
Q

Pathology, histopathology?

A

Pathology, histopathology

  • Acute, visceral form:
  • Mainly ovaries, testicles, spleen, liver, kidneys: enlarged infiltrated with tumours (nut ʹ
  • walnut sized, merging tumours)
  • Any other organs can be involved (heart, muscles, lungs, intestines)
  • Bursal atrophy
  • Feather follicles are enlarged, knobbly surface
  • In later stage peripheral nerve lesions may also emerge
  • Classical, neurological form: plexus brachialis, plexus ischiadicus enlarged, knobbly, oedematic,
  • asymmetric, merging; Sometimes knobbly ovaries
  • In layers or household birds because requires time to form

Histopathology

  • Visceral: focal or diffuse, non-differentiated lymphoblast proliferation, small lymphocytes &
  • lymphoblasts incr in the feather follicles
  • Neurological: peripheral nerves infiltrate with lymphocytes, histiocytes, plasma cells, neuron
  • dystrophy, endoneural tissue proliferation
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10
Q

Diagnosis?

A

Diagnosis

  • Clinical signs, pathology, histopathology ʹ suspicion
  • Virus isolation vaccine strain -> PCR + sequencing
  • Serology
  • AGID, VN ʹ vaccinations, frequent infections ʹ all flocks become positive
  • MATSA
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11
Q

Differential diagnosis?

A
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12
Q

Prevention, control?

A

Prevention, control

  • Preventing early infection
  • Frequent egg collection, shell disinfection, hatching hygiene
  • Cleaning, disinfection of stables (ventilators!)
  • Overpressure ventilation, filtered air, separate stuff
  • Cleaning & disinfection or destroying fomites
  • Breeding of genetically resistant chicken lines
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13
Q

Immunisation?

A

Immunisation:

  • vaccination does not protect from infection!
  • Attenuated serotype 1, (serotype 2): cell associated vaccine
  • Special storing conditions (-196oC), immediate use, good immunity, lower inhibition
  • of yolk immunity
  • Turkey herpes: easier storage & application, weaker protection
  • Bi & trivalent vaccines are also available
  • Alternating use of different vaccines in generations (Chickens ʹ layers)
  • Vaccination on the day of hatching! ʹ protection from day 7-8 on, booster does not increase
  • In ovo vaccination: 18 day old embryo, bivalent vaccine (GaHV-3 & MeHV)
  • Very virulent strains (vv+MDV) may break through the protection
  • New vaccines: fowl pox-vectored Marek or turkey
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