Weight loss sheep Flashcards

1
Q

List 8 differentials for weight loss in sheep

A

Degenerative- lame, broken mouth
Neoplastic: OPA
Nutritional: dietary deficiencies
Infectious:
- Iceberg- Johne’s, MV, CLA, Borders disease
- parasitic
- Scab - Psorptes ovis
-Lice
Toxic: ingested plant toxins, copper toxicity

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2
Q

what percentage lame sheep do we expect in a well managed flock

A

<2%

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3
Q

what can drive lameness in sheep

A

outbreaks of footrot, contagious ovine digital dermatitis (CODD)
eryspiela and joint ill in lambs

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4
Q

Describe lameness scoring in sheep

A

0= good or imperfect mobility
1= lame
2= severely lame

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5
Q

Describe the 5 point plan to reduce lamness in sheep

A

cull
vaccinate
quarantine
treat
avoid

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6
Q

what causes OPA

A

betaretrovirus called Jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus (JSRV)

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7
Q

List the clinical signs of OPA

A

chronic wasting
progressive respiratory distress
appetite remains good
leads to death

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8
Q

what happens in OPA

A

tumours grow in lungs and secrete fluid - both of these impair lung function

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9
Q

Describe how to ultrasound helps diagnose OPA

A

Will see hyperechoic lesions
is currently the only widely used method to diagnose preclinical or subclinical OPA in live sheep

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10
Q

What is MV caused by

A

lentivirus

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11
Q

Describe how MV is spread

A

aerosol
vertical through colostrum and milk

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12
Q

How is MV introduced to flock

A

always through introduced sheep

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13
Q

What causes Caeseous Lymphadenitis

A

Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis

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14
Q

Why is caeseous lymphadenitis hard to get rid of

A

Lasts well in the environment

Up to 20 weeks in the corners of sheds in purulent material
Up to 8 weeks on organic fomites
24 hours in sheep dips

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15
Q

when does Caeseous Lymphadenitis tend to spread

A

at shearing

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16
Q

what does Caeseous Lymphadenitis cause

A

Superficial infection –>Lymph nodes –> suppurating infection –> haematological spread –> abscesses in internal organs

17
Q

What causes border disease

A

pestivirus

18
Q

what is borders disease similar to

A

BVD in cattle

19
Q

what does borders disease cause

A

Abortions and still birth if infected early
hairy shaker- causes weird fleece and the lambs have clonic tonic contractions of skeletal muscle

Causes PIs if infected at appropriate times

20
Q

T/F Johnes causes weight loss and scour in sheep

A

False doesn’t cause scour in sheep

21
Q

How does Johnes affect albumin and globulin levels in sheep

A

low albumin
normal globulins (rarely low in severe disease)

22
Q

Describe how Johnes in sheep spreads

A

faecal oral transmission
good environment stability
subclinical carriers

23
Q

List 4 differentials of Johnes at flock level

A

poor nutrition
fasciolosis
chronic parasitism
virulent footrot

24
Q

List 4 differentials of Johnes on individual sheep level

A

dentition
chronic septic focus
chronic severe lameness
OPA

25
Q

Describe how to diagnose Johne’s in sheep

A

Blood albumin: globulin ratio in 10 affected animals is most useful

26
Q

Describe how to differentiate between johnes and liver fluke in sheep

A

look at albumin and globulin ratio
Both low= liver fluke
Albumin low- globulin normal= johnes

27
Q

Describe how to treat johnes in sheep

A

no treatment

28
Q

Describe what the problem with the johnes vaccine is in sheep

A

will reduce shedding but will not stop sheep getting infected

29
Q

describe how to control johnes in sheep

A

same as in cattle
culling positive sheep
trying to prevent lambs from getting infected

30
Q

How long does it take for liver fluke to produce eggs

A

8 weeks

31
Q

when does acute liver fluke signs show

A

3 weeks after lots of immature fluke eaten
will see massive fatal haemorrhage in liver

32
Q

Describe the sub-acute signs of liver fluke in sheep

A

rapid loss of weight
some weaker sheep recumbent
mortality can be high but after a period of clinical signs

33
Q

Describe the clinical signs seen with chronic liver fluke

A

very poor condition score - will decrease slowely
bottle jaw
may die in emaciated state at times of high metabolic demand

34
Q

How can vaccinating for clostridia reduce mortaility of liver fluke

A

Naturally find clostridia spores in the liver so when liver damage occurs these can be released, can tipp the sheep over the edge

35
Q

Describe how to diagnose liver fluke

A

faecal egg flotation
fluke ELISA- better for young animals
Hypoproteinaemia in blood
PM

36
Q

what do you see on PM with liver fluke

A

Acute- pale anaemic liver, not smooth, see tracts and poss necrosis
Chronic- calcified bile ducts, possibly see adult flukes

37
Q

Describe how to prevent liver fluke

A

stop the sheep shedding eggs - treat effectively during quarantine
pasture management- stop sheep going into snail habitat

38
Q

Describe how to treat liver fluke (quarentine dose)

A

Dose that kills everything
Triclabendazole (is a benzimadazole) followed by closantel or nitroxynil is considered a good approach

39
Q

What is important to consider about treating fluke

A

what stage of liver fluke you are targeting
consider time of year- some more effective than others