Potomac Horse Fever Flashcards

1
Q

What is potomac horse fever caused by?

A

Neorickettsia risticii

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2
Q

Is it gram (-) or (+)

A

gram (-)

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3
Q

What type of bacteria is it?

A

intracellular bacteria that invades macrophages and epithelial cells of the intestine

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4
Q

Neorickettsia risticii

A

an environmental bacterium that lives inside flukes that are parasitic to aquatic snails, insects, and bats

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5
Q

How is the N. risticii bacterium transmitted to horses?

A

when a horse accidentally ingests insects harboring flukes infected with N. risticii (causes acute and possibly fatal disease)

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6
Q

When and where was the disease first recognized?

A

in 1979 along the Potomac river in Maryland

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7
Q

Where in the world does potomac horse fever occur?

A

-43 states in US
-3 provinces of Canada
-South America
-Europe
-India

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8
Q

Where does potomac horse fever occur?

A

near fresh water streams, rivers, and irrigated pastures

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9
Q

When is the disease most prevalent?

A

May-November

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10
Q

Where is the organism present?

A

in feces

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11
Q

What is most likely the intermediate hosts of the fluke?

A

snails

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12
Q

What % of snails are infected with the fluke (depending on the time of the year)

A

3-93%

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13
Q

What are some second intermediate hosts?

A

-aquatic insects
-mayfly
-dragonfly
-caddisfly
-damselfly

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14
Q

What % of the aquatic insects (second intermediate hosts) test positive for N. risticii?

A

up to 80%

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15
Q

What is a possible host?

A

-no definitive host has been found but possibly insect eating bats

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16
Q

How has experimental PHF been transmitted?

A

-IV
-IM
-SQ
-ID
-PO

17
Q

How may horses be infected?

A

-through skin penetration
-ingesting contaminated water or insect

18
Q

When can accidental ingestion of insects occur?

A

-grazing near streams
-drinking stream water
-insects are attracted to barn lights and are present in feed and water (turn of barn lights when possible)

19
Q

What does N. risticii infect after infection?

A

blood monocytes

20
Q

What cells does it infect?

A

epithelial cells of the intestine

21
Q

Where are lesions confined to?

A

the GI tract, especially the large colon

22
Q

What does PHF reduce?

A

luminal absorption of electrolytes (Na and Cl) and increased water losses

23
Q

Diarrhea causes…

A

a loss of epithelial cells

24
Q

How long are recovered horses immune for?

A

at least 20 months

25
Q

How long is the incubation period?

A

1-3 weeks

26
Q

What are some risk factors?

A

-proximity to ponds
-time spent outside
-no use of insecticides

27
Q

Clinical signs of PHF:

A

-depression
-anorexia
-Biphasic fever: 102-107 degrees
-decreased intestinal sounds
-severe toxemia, dehydration, cardiac compromise, congested mucosal membranes
-laminitis

28
Q

Clinical signs within 24-48 hours:

A

moderate to severe diarrhea, mild abdominal discomfort

29
Q

Laminitis caused by PHF:

A

more common than in other causes of enterocolitis
-if it develops it is usually more severe and often refractory to treatment
-very common in PHF

30
Q

Mortality

A

5-30% (associated with laminitis and toxemia)

31
Q

What does mortality depend on:

A

-living environment
-vet resources
-how severe the horses symptoms get
-how much money the owner can provide

32
Q

How is PHF diagnosed?

A

-clinical signs
-time of year
-isolation of N. risticii from blood or feces (difficult and time consuming)
-PCR to detect the DNA in blood and feces (more reliable than culturing the organism)
-serology to detect antibodies may not be useful

33
Q

Once treatment has started, how quickly is the response?

A

very fast (within 3 days if therapy is started early)

34
Q

Treatment antibiotics given:

A

-IV oxytetracycline
-BID
-5 days
-if given early, a response to treatment is seen within 12 hrs

35
Q

Other treatments:

A

-fluids to prevent hypovolemia and shock
-banamine for fever and abdominal discomfort and prevent endotoxemia
-watch for signs of laminitis

36
Q

What % of horses is the vaccine experimentally reported to protect?

A

78%

37
Q

Vaccine failure

A

proposed explanations for this include
-lack of seroconversion (killed, adjuvant)
-multiple field strains whereas only one strain is present in available vaccines
-attributed to antigenic and genomic heterogeneity among the >14 strains of N. risticii isolated from natural occurring cases

38
Q

Prevention of PHF:

A

-vaccination (questionable usefulness)
-limit access of horses to streams, ponds
-turn off the lights of barns in the evening