Food animal neurology 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Verminous Meningoencephalitis
- causes in various species?

A

 Hypoderma lineatum & bovis (cattle, horse, deer)
 Paralophastrongylus tenuis (sm. ruminants, camelids, cervids (& horses)) – meningeal worm white-tailed deer)
 Strongylus vulgaris (horse)
 Halicephalobus gingivalis (formerly - Micronema deletrix) (horse)

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2
Q

Sorghum (Sudan Grass) Toxicity
- geography
- signs
- who is affected?
- toxin?

A

 Southwestern USA, Australia
 Ataxia, cystitis
 Horses (cattle, sheep)
 Toxin – unknown; may be chronic cyanide toxicity.

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3
Q

Sorghum Toxicity - more signs

A

– ataxia – hind limbs followed by urinary
incontinence. Swaying pelvic limb gait, knuckle at fetlocks. Horse may “bunny hop,” have difficulty backing & may fall.
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Genitalia
 Vulva – laxity
 Penis – dropped, lax
<><>tail weakness
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Loss of skin sensation of hindquarters.
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- Cystitis – secondary to urine retention
- Urine scalding of skin
- (pyelonephritis – rare)

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4
Q

Sorghum Toxicity - signs in sheep

A

Sheep – head shaking, ataxia, weakness, recumbency, opisthotonus, death (mortality <50%)

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5
Q

Sorghum Toxicity - additional signs in mares, foals, and lambs

A

– abortion in mares, arthrogryposis (foals & lambs), neurologic abnormalities (lambs)

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6
Q

Tetanus
- agent
- found where
- resistance?
- toxins?
- species sensitivity?
- signs

A

 Clostidium tetani – anaerobic, spore-forming, Gram-positive bacterium
 Bacteria are ubiquitous in environment
 Spores are very resistant to disinfectants
 Toxins: exotoxins: tetanospasmin (TeNT), tetanolysin
 Sensitivity to the toxins: Horse > small ruminant > cattle
 Signs: muscle rigidity & spasm
 Death common – convulsions, respiratory failure

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7
Q

Tetanus
 Horses - common ways to get infected

A

 Wounds – esp. lower legs
 Surgical wounds
 Post partum uterus
 Umbilicus
 Injection site abscesses

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8
Q

Tetanus
 Ruminants - common ways to getinfected

A

 Post partum uterus
 Elastrator bands, sharp castration sites
 Tail docking, dehorning, disbudding
 Bull rings, ear tags, shearing
 IM injections
 Umbilicus

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9
Q

Idiopathic tetanus

A

– rough feed causes mouth trauma.
> Toxicoinfectious, ingest toxin??

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10
Q

Tetanus
 Pathogenesis

A

 Tetanolysin causes tissue necrosis
 Tetanospasmin – hematogenous spread to somatic neuromuscular
junctions and autonomic ganglia.
 Binds to neuron, is internalized, moves by reverse axon transport
 Reaches neuronal cell body, goes across synaptic cleft and binds to presynaptic junction, irreversibly binds, prevents release of inhibitory
neurotransmitters (glycine, GABA)
 > Disinhibition of motor neurons

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11
Q

Botulism
- agent
- result of infection, signs

A

 Clostridium botulinum
 Anaerobic, spore-forming bacterium
 Gram-positive
 Highly fatal
 Progressive, paralysis – generalized
 Death – respiratory failure, euthanasia

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12
Q

Botulism - toxins, where found

A

– 8 types; A-G
<><>
In general:
 Soil contamination – A & B
 Carcass contamination – C & D
 Type B – mid-Atlantic States, Kentucky
 Type A – western states
 Type C – sporadic identification
 Type D – rarely identified in North America

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13
Q

Botulism
- ways to get infected? most common?
- who is most susceptible? epidemiology?

A

 Ingest preformed toxin – forage poisoning (most common)
 Toxicoinfectious – gastrointestinal growth, very young animals (foals;
shaker foals)
 Wound-associated (includes surgical sites)
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 Horses much more susceptible than cattle
 Usually 1 to a few horses in a herd but can have outbreaks
 Cattle – may occur as outbreaks (increased incidence of poultry litter-associated)

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14
Q

Botulism - Pathogenesis

A

 Toxin absorbed into blood stream
 Travels to neuromuscular end plates
 Attaches to the presynaptic nerve terminus
 Receptor-mediated internalization
 Light chain → prevention of attachment & release of acetylcholine vesicles
 Paralysis – motor neurons, parasympathetic smooth muscle
 Irreversible binding. Recovery - need to sprout new motor end- plates (takes weeks)

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15
Q

Feed Sources of botulism

A

 Ensiled feed
> Small grains, hay
> Corn silage
 Hay, grains
 Carcasses
 Poultry litter!!

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16
Q

botulism diagnosis?

A

 Based solely on clinical signs
 Identification of toxin, bacteria, spore detection: very difficult to do
> Mouse lethality assay – not available anymore
> Antibody detection in convalescent animal
 Routine blood analysis, necropsy – may help to rule-out other diseases.

17
Q

Diagnosis – Clinical Signs of botulism

A

 Slow, ambling gait
 Dysphagia – slow eating, drop feed, pharyngeal dysfunction,
fluid/feed material out of nose
 Decreased gut sounds, colic
 Weakness, muscle fasciculations, recumbency
 Facial nerve paresis, paralysis
 Weakness – tongue, eyelid, iris, tail tone
 > flaccid paresis → flaccid paralysis

18
Q

Botulism
 Treatment

A

 Remove source
 Specific anti-toxin - obtain from commercial plasma sources
 High-dose penicillin especially if wound-associated or gastrointestinal growth of bacteria.
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 Caution – do not use gentamicin, oxytetracycline or procaine penicillin G as these will have a detrimental affect on neural conduction.
> always true but only really relevant in botulism cases!
 Supportive care

19
Q

Botulism
 Prognosis –

A

 Very poor if untreated, esp. if recumbent
 With treatment – may be favorable if early, not severe
 Requires intensive nursing care (fluid therapy, nutritional therapy);
> recumbent animals prone to secondary muscle damage & necrosis due to the weight.

20
Q

CFIA – Rabies Cases 2023
- province with greatest prevalence?
- strain / species most prevalent?

A
  • Ontario! >5x Sk, Nu… ~50% of all cases in canada
  • mostly bat strain (far second is skunk)
20
Q

Botulism Prevention

A

 Do not feed ensiled feed to horses unless vaccinated against botulism
 Vaccinate – Type B vaccine labelled for horses