Curved and Spiral Bacteria (Spirochetes) Flashcards

1
Q

Morphology of Spirochetes

A

Tightly coiled mini springs
Endoflagella
Corkscrew motility
Gram neg but stains poorly

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2
Q

How do you detect spirochetes?

A

Impression smears
Dark-field microscopy
Silver, carbol fuchsin, giemsa

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3
Q

Genus Borrelia transmission

A

Arthropod transmission –> ticks to skin for at least 48 hours and spread via CT

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4
Q

Where do most Borrelia cases occur?

A

Wisconsin and Minnesota (80% of ticks carry)

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5
Q

Which animals are most effected by Borrelia?

A

Canines –> horses, cattle and cats also
Only 5% of infected dogs show clinical signs

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6
Q

What’s the causative agents of Borreliosis (Lyme’s disease)?

A

B. Burhdorferi

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7
Q

Transmission cycle for B. burgdorferi

A

Deer or mice –> dogs and humans by bite of adults or nymphs of soft ticks of genus Ixodes

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8
Q

Clinical signs in dogs with Borreliosis

A

Develops 2-5 months after exposure
Fever, swollen LNs
Polyarthropathy (shift leg lameness)
Renal failure
CNS symptoms

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9
Q

Renal failure in dogs with Borreliosis

A

Protein losing glomerulopathy
Especially in Labs and goldens

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10
Q

How do you diagnose borrelia

A

Serologic tests for Abs
ELISA and IFA Abs
C6 Ab test
PCR and culture to identify organisms

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11
Q

ELISA and IFA Abs

A

Doesn’t differentiate between natural and vx infection
TIter increases within 4-6 weeks after exposure
+ = persist for years

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12
Q

C6 Ab test

A

Recommended by the CDC
Detects the outer surface of protein Borrelia
Early detection before CS development

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13
Q

PCR and culture

A

Best for skin biopsy from around tick bite

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14
Q

Treatment and prevention for Borrelia

A

Doxycycline orally for dogs with CS
VX dogs @ risk
Tick preventative: topical fipronil, permethrin or amitraz

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15
Q

Brachyspira

A

Intestine of pigs, wild rats and mice
B. hyodysenteriae (swine) and pilosicoli (swine, humans, primates, birds)
Uses Romanovsky’s stains

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16
Q

B. hyodysenteriae

A

Highly motile in GIT mucus (flagella)
Colonization of colonic crypts
Invades goblet cells of the colonic mucosa

17
Q

Symptoms of B. hyodysenteriae

A

Swine dysentery (acute bloody diarrhea)
Chronic emaciation
Weight loss

18
Q

What increases the severity of B. hyodysenteriae?

A

Low in fiber and high in highly fermentable carbs

19
Q

Dysentery in swine

A

Cannot be produced in gnotobiotic (germ free animals) pigs
Older animals more susceptible

20
Q

B. hyodysenteriae diagnosis

A

Deep mucosal scrapping
Large intestine from dead pig
Rectal swabs and feces from affected pig

21
Q

Genus Lawsonia (Lawsonia intracellularis species)

A

Gram-neg, curved rods
Motile with darting motion (single flagella)
Intracellular pathogen in pigs and hamsters
Cultivation requires eukaryotic cells

22
Q

Where is the chronic form of Lawsonia intracellularis found?

A

Common on traditional, single-site farrow-to-finish farms (spreads easily)

23
Q

Lawsonia intracellularis is an etiologic agent of ______

A

Intestinal hyperplastic called Proliferative Enteropathy

24
Q

Proliferative Enteropathy

A

Horses, pigs, hamsters
Porcine proliferative enteritis, ileitis, intesinal adenomatosis, garden-hose gut

25
Q

Proliferative Enteropathy pathogenesis

A

Intracellular pathogen spread by comingling animals of different ages or sub-clinically infected sows

26
Q

4 forms of Proliferative Enteropathy

A
  1. Proliferative hemorrhagic enteropathy (older naive animals)
  2. Porcine intestinal adenomatosis
  3. Necrotic enteritis
  4. Regional ileitis (recovery stage of NE)
27
Q

Proliferative Enteropathy acute infection in pigs

A

Older, naive (4-12 months)
Intestinal hemorrhage, sudden death, pale carcass, petechial hemorrhage of intestinal mucosa

28
Q

Proliferative Enteropathy chronic infection in pigs

A

Manifests due to stress (1-3 weeks post weaning)
Lasts 1-3 weeks with mild enteritis (lasts 10-12 weeks)

29
Q

Proliferative Enteropathy subclinical infection in pigs

A

manifests with animals showing poor growth

30
Q

Proliferative Enteropathy in equine

A

Affects weanling foals (3-6 months)
Stress induced
Dullness, fever, weight loss, colic, diarrhea, hypoproteinemia
Leukocytosis, mild anemia

31
Q

Lawsonia intracellularis pathogenesis

A
  1. Infection of tonsils, LN (macrophages)
  2. Migration to GIT (enterocytes)
  3. Hyperplasia
  4. Crypts long and branched
  5. Increased neutrophils, macrophages, and lymphocytes
  6. Decreased goblet cells
32
Q

Epidemiology of Lawsonia intracellularis

A

Fecal matter from infected pigs (source)
Not K+ peroxy monosulphate, Na+ hypochlorite, penolics, H2O2, peracetic acid

33
Q

Diagnosis of Lawsonia intracellularis

A

Herd history + clinical signs
Gross + microscopic lesions
Fecal PCR + serology
Abdominal ultrasound in equine

34
Q

Control and treatment of Lawsonia intracellularis

A

All in all out
Modified life vaccine
Use Chlortetracycline, lincomycin-spectinomycin, tylosin, tiamulin

35
Q

Treatment for equine proliferative enteropathy

A

Fluid and electrocyte therapy
Erythromycin, azithromycin, rifampin