Buccal Cavity Infections (7) Flashcards

1
Q

What is candidiasis?

A

localized mucocutaneous disease caused by Candida albicans

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2
Q

What is candidiasis caused by?

A

candida albicans

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3
Q

C. albicans is a normal inhabitant in the body. Where?

A

nasopharynx, GI tract, external genitalia

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4
Q

C. albicans is _____ in causing diseases

A

opportunistic

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5
Q

What are factors associated with candida infections?

A

disruption of mucosal integrity
indwelling, intravenous, or urinary catheters
administration of antibiotics
immunosuppressive drugs or diseases

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6
Q

Which species does c. albicans normally affect?

A

birds

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7
Q

What is candidiasis in birds called?

A

thrush
crop mycosis
sour crop

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8
Q

What is candidiasis in birds? Where in the body does it affect?

A

a disease of the digestive tract of chickens and turkeys caused by c. albicans

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9
Q

Which types of birds are most susceptible to c. albicans?

A

young birds and poults

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10
Q

In candidiasis in birds, lesions are mostly found in the _____. What do they consist of?

A

crop

thickened mucosa
whitish, raised pseudomembranes

infrequently, shallow ulcers and sloughing of necrotic epithelium may be present

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11
Q

What are clinical signs in candidiasis in birds?

A

listlessness
inappetence

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12
Q

How do you control and prevent candidiasis in birds?

A

improving sanitation and minimizing antibiotic use help reduce the incidences

nystatin and fluconazole for treatment

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13
Q

What is the name of candidiasis in other species called? It is [frequent/infrequent] in dogs and cats

A

cutaneous candidiasis

infrequent

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14
Q

In dogs regarding cutaneous candidiasis, _______ may be found on the muzzle, inguinal area, scrotum, and dorsal and lateral aspects of the feet

A

exfoliative dermatitis

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15
Q

Regarding candidiasis in foxhounds, what occurs?

A

otitis externa

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16
Q

In foals and calves regarding candidiasis, what occurs in association with gastric ulceration?

A

gastrointestinal candidiasis

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17
Q

What do pigs get when infected with candidiasis?

A

cutaneous and mucocutaneous infection

18
Q

How do you diagnose candidiasis?

A

made by examination of scrapings or biopsy specimens from mucocutaneous lesions

sabouraud’s debtors agar colonies (white to cream colored, smooth, glabrous, and yeast-like in appearance)

19
Q

What are the morphological characteristics of c. albicans?

A

ovoid, budding yeast cells with thin walls

20
Q

In c. albicans, ____ or _____ may also be seen in the clinical specimen

A

pseudohyphae

true hyphae

21
Q

How do you differentiate c. albicans from other candida?

A

germ tube test

22
Q

What other tests can be used to diagnose candidiasis?

A

biochemical tests

molecular tests

23
Q

What is aspergillosis caused by?

A

several aspergillus spp., especially A. fumigatus and A. terreus

24
Q

What is aspergillosis?

A

primarily a respiratory infection

however, tissue predilection varies among species

25
Q

What are the most common forms of aspergillosis?

A

guttural pouch mycosis in horses

infections of nasal and paranasal tissues, intervertebral sites and kidneys in dogs

26
Q

What is guttural pouch mycosis?

A

mycotic plaques in caudodorsal aspect of medial guttural pouch — over the internal carotid artery

27
Q

What is the most common clinical sign of guttural pouch mycosis? What is it due to?

A

epistaxis (nosebleed)

due to fungal erosion of the wall of either the internal carotid artery or branches of the external carotid artery

28
Q

How do you diagnose guttural pouch mycosis? Treatment?

A

endoscopic examination

topic and systemic anti fungal therapy

29
Q

What is canine nasal aspergillosis?

A

mucosa of the nasal and paranasal sinuses may be covered by a layer of gray-black necrotic material and fungal growth

the mucosa and underlying bone may be necrotic with loss of bone definition on radiographs

30
Q

What is the diagnosis of aspergillus spp.?

A

microscopy of tissue samples

hyaline, septet hyphae that branch dichotomously with a 45 degree angle

31
Q

What is this?

A

aspergillosis spp.

32
Q

What is treatment of aspergillus spp.?

A

topical ozole (clotrimazole) delivered as a 1-hour infusion

33
Q

Fusobacterium necrophorum is part of what normally?

A

part of the normal flora of the mouth, intestines, and genitalia tract of herbivores and omnivores

also widespread in environment

34
Q

Fusobacterium necrophorum is considered to be a ________ instead of what?

A

a secondary invader instead of a primary cause of disease

35
Q

What is calf diphtheria?

A

an infectious disease affecting the pharynx, larynx, and oral cavity

36
Q

Diphtheria occurs as ________ in [calves/adult cattle]

A

necrotic stomatitis
calves - less than 3 months of age

37
Q

What is the causative agent of calf diphtheria?

A

fusobacterium necrophorum

38
Q

What does diphtheria most commonly present as?

A

necrotic stomatitis in calves less than 3 months

  • usually occurs as necrotic laryngitis in older calves
39
Q

What does necrotic stomatitis cause?

A

fever
depression
anorexia
excessive salivation
foul-smelling breath

40
Q

Lesions for calf diphtheria include what?

A

marked edema, hyperemia, swollen oral, pharyngeal mucous membranes surrounding a necrotic ulcer

41
Q

In smears from deep in the lesions, what may be identified in fusobacterium necrophorum?

A

filamentous, beaded, gram-NEGATIVE bacteria

can be cultured on blood agar in ANaerobic environment

42
Q

How do you treat calf diphtheria?

A

sulfonamides or procaine penicillin G