6.2.4: Iceberg diseases in sheep Flashcards

1
Q

What are 5 common iceberg diseases in sheep?

A
  • Maedi Visna
  • Ovine Pulmonary Adenocarcinoma (OPA)
  • Caseous Lymphadenitis (CLA)
  • Ovine Johne’s Disease (OJD)
  • Border Disease (BD)
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2
Q

Maedi Visna causative agent and relevance of this

A
  • Lentivirus
  • Has long incubation period (months to years)
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3
Q

How is Maedi Visna transmitted?

A
  • Oronasal - mainly
  • Colostrum/milk
  • Fomites
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4
Q

Describe regional variation in Maedi Visna

A
  • (See up to date figures but) high prevalence in Leicestershire and Gloucestershire
  • Tend to see more MV in lowland flocks compared to upland -> lowland have lower stocking density/housed more often or for longer
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5
Q

Diagnosis of Maedi Visna

A
  • Serology - but antibodies wax and wane so can’t rule it out even if negative result
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6
Q

Treatment of Maedi Visna

A

No treatment

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7
Q

Control of Maedi Visna

A
  • Purchase from accredited flocks
  • Test, monitor and cull positive animals
  • Reduce stocking density
  • Prevent contact with neighbouring flocks (e.g. double fencing/high fencing)
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8
Q

If you have a flock with a high prevalence of Maedi Visna, what control measures could you implement?

A
  1. Cull flock and restock with accredited sheep - may be economically not viable
  2. Try to reduce losses through management i.e.
    * Keep flock young
    * Split older and younger sheep for management
    * Cull thin ewes/suspect cases
    * Run a less intestive system to reduce spread
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9
Q

Ovine pulmonary adenocarcinoma causative agent

A

Retrovirus
Can have long incubation period of 6 months to several years

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10
Q

Pathogenesis and clinical presentation of OPA

A
  • Causes neoplastic proliferation of lung cells (=adenocarcinoma)
  • Presents with increased RR, laboured breathing, ill thrift, sudden death
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11
Q

Transmission of OPA

A
  • Mainly aerosol
  • Can be spread through colostrum/milk
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12
Q

Diagnosis of OPA

A
  • No blood test commercially avaiable
  • Interpret lung ultrasonography with caution (anything that causes consolidation will look similar)
  • No definitive diagnosis possible in live animals, only on PME
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13
Q

Control of OPA

A
  • Identify and cull infected and offspring - difficult without test
  • Undertake PM of sudden deaths/those showing ill-thrift
  • Manage in single age groups with youngstock separate from adults
  • Reduce close contact -> consider housing, stocking density, adequate trough space, hygiene
  • Snatch lambing is theoretically good but not practical for most flocks
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14
Q

Causative agent of Caseous Lymphadenitis (CLA)

A

Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

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15
Q

Transmission of CLA

A
  • Through skin abrasion, inhalation or ingestion
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16
Q

Clinical presentation of CLA

A
  • Abscesses in LNs with characteristic green pus
  • Typically around head and neck, sometimes inguinal/scrotal in tups, or potentially internal
  • If abscesses on internal LNs, may only see weight loss
17
Q

Diagnosis of CLA

A
  • Bacteriology - requires draining abscess so should quarantine this sheep
  • Serology - high specificity, low sensitivity so cannot rule out just because test negative. Antibodies wax and wane and presence of antibody doesn’t necessarily mean bacterium has caused clinical disease.
  • Repeat testing and examining at flock level is recommended
18
Q

Treatment and control of CLA

A
  • Antibiotics not effective
  • Vaccine not available in UK, can be imported on special licence but efficacy variable
  • Control: buy from trusted sources, boundary biosecurity, separate infected animals
19
Q

True/false: CLA is zoonotic.

A

True
But it is rarely reported in people

20
Q

You suspect a sheep to have CLA. Is it a good idea to lance the abscess to aid diagnosis? Why/why not?

A
  • Can lance abscess for bacteriology
  • However this sheep could then spread infection from the draining abscess so you must ensure it is quarantined away from the rest of the flock
21
Q

If you choose to vaccinate CLA, which animals should you vaccinate?

A
  • Vaccinate the lambs that are going to be reared as replacements
  • Hopefully this will protect the flock in future
22
Q

If you choose to vaccinate for CLA, what should you be aware of?

A
  • Vaccine not available in UK and has to be imported under Special Import Licence
  • Vaccine efficacy is variable especially against UK strains
  • Vaccine interferes with testing/eradication programmes that use serology (not DIVA)
23
Q

Causative agent of Ovine Johne’s Disease

A

Mycobacterium avium spp. paratuberculosis (MAP)
* There are cattle and sheep strains (C and S) and sheep are susceptible to both

24
Q

Breed? Disease?

A
  • Suffolk
  • Shows low BCS -> suspicious of any chronic wasting disorder
  • This animal has Ovine Johnes Disease (OJD)