84. Borna disease, avian diseases caused by bornaviruses. Flashcards

1
Q

Bornaviruses info?

A

Bornaviruses

  • Bornaviridae, Bornavirus genus
  • Ss RNA, enveloped
  • Low resistance
  • Replication in nucleus of nerve cells
  • Encephalomyelitis
  • Nerve cell degeneration

• Hosts: mammals, birds, reptiles

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2
Q

Borna disease Occurrence?

A

Borna disease

Etiology

  • Uniform virus, 1 serotype, enveloped
  • Occurrence
  • Borna 1894-1896, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, France, Sweden, USA, Japan
  • More widespread seropositivity
  • Free virions produced in low number
  • Virus remains cell bound
  • Low resistance
  • Horse, sheep, cattle, goat, rabbit, cat, human, rodent, lab mice, rats, shrew-mouse, voles
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3
Q

Epidemiology of Borna disease?

A

Epidemiology

• Reservoir

  • Shrew-mouse, rodents
  • Frequently asymptomatic infection
  • Shed in saliva, urine, faeces

• Infection

  • Transmission with lymphoid cells
  • Nasal discharge, saliva
  • Pasture
  • Contact with deceased animals
  • Eating infected animals (carnivores)
  • Endemic (only in certain parts of village)
  • Spring-Summer
  • Sporadic in horses, massive in sheep
  • Low morbidity, High lethality
  • Subclinical infection common
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4
Q

Pathogenesis of Borna disease?

A

Pathogenesis

  1. Infection: aerosol, PO
  2. Nasal mucous membrane ➝ N. Olfactorius ➝ Brain (long persisted infection)
  3. Replication in grey material of brain
  4. Spread: cell-to-cell ➝ slow spread within host ➝ into spinal cord ➝ eye and organs along nerves (appears in discharge: saliva, nasal discharge, urine, faeces)
  5. Antibody production (do not inhibit viral replication)
  6. Long carriage of virus
  7. Many asymptomatic infections
  8. Pathological lesions ➝ meningoencephalitis, slow degeneration
  9. Reasons for pathological lesions
    - Infected cells + T-cell cytotoxic reaction
    - Death of cells of limbic system
  10. 90% animals with clinical signs die soon
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5
Q

Clinical signs of Borna disease?

A

Clinical signs

• Horse

  • Incubation: 1-3 months
  • Appears slowly
  • Depression, excitation, spasms, salivation, weakness, hyperaesthesia, apathy, somnolence, dullness, slowing down, ataxia, balance
  • Lameness, death

• Sheep, cattle, cat ➝ ataxia, spasm, paralysis

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6
Q

Pathology of Borna disease?

A

Pathology

  • There are no gross pathological lesions
  • Histopathology
  • Meningeal plethora, brain oedema
  • Polioencephalomyelitis (brain stem, limbic system)
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7
Q

Diagnosis of Borna disease?

A

Diagnosis

  • Epidemiology, clinical signs, pathology, histology (inclusion bodies)
  • Virus detection ➝ PCR, IF, ELISA, isolation
  • Serology (blood, liquor) ➝ IF, ELISA, blot
  • DD: rabies, viral encephalitis of horses, tetanus, scrapie, BSE
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8
Q

Prevention and Public health aspects of borna disease?

A

Prevention

  • Diseased animals ➝ isolation, killing
  • Infected herd
  • Closed herd, removal of infected animals
  • Vaccination

‣ Attenuated vaccine

‣ Vector vaccine

Public health aspects

  • Psychiatric patients ➝ depression, schizophrenia ➝ seropositivity, presence of virus
  • Way of infection unknown
  • Rodent connection, Germany: squirrel breeders
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9
Q

Proventricular dilation disease Ethiology and epidemiology?

A

Proventricular Dilatation Disease

Etiology

  • Worldwide
  • Avian bornaviruses
  • Parrot, canary, wild living birds
  • Several genotypes

Epidemiology

  • Parrot breeding units
  • Virus shed in faeces
  • Disease in young and adult birds
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10
Q

Pathogenesis of Proventricular dilation disease?

A

Pathogenesis

  1. Infection PO
  2. Viraemia
    • Brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves, eye ➝ inflammation, perivascular infiltration, damage of nerve cells
    • Alimentary signs because of peripheral nerve inflammation
  1. Shedding in urine and faeces
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11
Q

Clinical signs of Proventricular dilation disease?

A

Clinical signs

  • 2-4 weeks old, also adult birds ➝ alimentary and CNS signs
  • Alimentary ➝ anorexia, difficulties swallowing, regurgitation, undigested feed in faeces
  • Neurological ➝ ataxia, weakness, convulsion
  • Diseased animals die
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12
Q

Pathology and diagnosis of Proventricular dilation diagnosis?

A

Pathology

  • Atrophy and dilatation of proventriculus
  • Histology ➝ encephalomyelitis, inflammation and degeneration of peripheral nerves

Diagnosis

  • Epidemiology, clinical signs, pathology
  • Virus detection ➝ PCR, IF, immunohistochemistry, virus isolation
  • Antibody detection ➝ iIF, immune blot
  • Control ➝ general epidemiological measures
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