Respiratory Infections IV (27) Flashcards

Dr. Erol

1
Q

What is strangles? What are its negative effects?

A

one of the most important diseases of horses in developed countries

disruption of management of commercial horse establishments
time necessary to treat affected horses
esthetic unpleasantness

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2
Q

What is the causative agent of strangles?

A

streptococcus equi subsp. equi

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3
Q

T/F: S. equi can cause disease in other species

A

FALSE - only in equids

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4
Q

What is the epidemiology of strangles?

A

highly contagious disease that affects horses of all ages
more common in young animals

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5
Q

What are clinical findings of strangles?

A

acute onset of fever, anorexia, depression

submandibular and pharyngeal lymphadenopathy with abscessation and rupture

copious purulent nasal discharge

metastatic infection in other organ systems

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6
Q

What are lesions of strangles?

A

caseous lymphadenopathy with rhinitis and pharyngitis, pneumonia, and metastatic infections in severe cases

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7
Q

How do you diagnose s. equi?

A

culture of it

PCR

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8
Q

How do you treat strangles?

A

systemic administration of penicillin and local treatment of abscesses

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9
Q

What are the morphological characteristics of strangles?

A

gram-positive
facultative anaerobic
catalase and coagulase negative
highly adapted to equidae

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10
Q

S. equi is coagulase [positive/negative] and urease [positive/negative]

A

both NEGATIVE

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11
Q

Who all does s. equi affect?

A

horses, ponies, donkeys, and mules - equids

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12
Q

S. equi is a(n) _______ parasite of horses and all infections are attributable to transmission from infected horses either _____ or by ______

A

obligate

directly or by fomites

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13
Q

Describe immunity regarding s. equi

A

resistance to the disease is associated with the production of serum and mucosal antibodies to the streptococcal M protein (SeM)

animals that have previously had the disease are less likely than naiive animals to develop the disease on subsequent exposure

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14
Q

How many horses do not develop protective immunity from strangles?

A

25%

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15
Q

The virulence of s. equi is attributable to the presence of ______

A

M proteins on the surface of bacteria

hyaluronic acid capsule

production of a leukocidal toxin

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16
Q

M proteins of strangles are associated with _____

A

adhesion to oral nasal and pharyngeal tissue
invasion of pharyngeal tonsils
evasion of innate immunity

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17
Q

What part of s. equi provides resistance to phagocytosis?

A

capsule

18
Q

What in s. equi causes damage? What kind?

A

toxins

cell damage

19
Q

Migration of neutrophils into lymph nodes regarding s. equi causes ______

A

swelling and abscessation

20
Q

Because s. equi causes abscesses, what eventually happens?

A

eventually rupture and drain

21
Q

How long is s. equi shed nasally?

A

2-3 weeks

22
Q

If an equid dies from strangles (which is rare), what is the reason?

A

due to pneumonia caused by aspiration of the infected material

asphyxiation secondary to upper airway obstruction

impairment of organ function by metastatic infection

23
Q

What disease can follow after strangles? What is it associated with?

A

purpura hemorrhagica

associated with high serum antibody titers to SeM

24
Q

What does strangles manifest as?

A

an acute disease of varying severity, infection of retropharyngeal lymph nodes and guttural pouches

a chronic disease associated with metastatic infection of organs distant from respiratory tract

25
Q

Severity of strangles varies how?

A

age
immune status
size of onoculum
duration of exposure

26
Q

Why is it called strangles?

A

derives from the enlarged retropharyngeal lymph nodes and guttural pouches causing respiratory distress in severely affected animals

27
Q

What is the acute form of strangles characterized by?

A

mucopurulent nasal discharge
abscessation of submandibular and retropharyngeal lymph nodes

28
Q

A horse suddenly has an onset of symptoms like anorexia, depression, and serous nasal discharge that is becoming copious and purulent. Another horse 1-3 weeks ago was also ill with this. What is the disease and causative agent? Be specific

A

strangles - acute form

s. equi

29
Q

What manifestations of strangles is this foal experiencing?

A

enlarged, abscessed submandibular LN

30
Q

What are clinical findings of strangles?

A

swelling of lymph node occurring 3-4 days
serum exudate in 10 days and rupture shortly afterwards

31
Q

Regarding strangles, what can retropharyngeal lymph node abscesses rupturing cause?

A

can rupture into the guttural pouch, causing guttural pouch empyema and formation of chondroids

32
Q

This endoscope is focused in the guttural pouch of a horse with strangles. What are we seeing?

A

chondroids

33
Q

What is the most common fatal complication of strangles?

A

the development of suppurative necrotic bronchopneumonia (aspiration of pus from ruptured abscesses)

34
Q

What is metastatic infection regarding strangles? What is it also called?

A

formation of abscess in any organ or body site but most commonly in the lungs, mesenteric lymph nodes

bastard strangles - a serious complication

35
Q

What hypersensitivity disease can occur after infection with strangles? When does it arise?

A

purport hemorrhagica - considered an immune-mediated disease which occurs in a subset of affected horses 1-3 weeks after the initial illness

36
Q

A horse recently recovered from a respiratory infection (s. equi) and is now experiencing these symptoms. What could possibly be the cause of this?

A

purpura hemorrhagica

37
Q

How do you diagnose s. equi?

A

clinical signs and history of exposure

microscopic exam of abscess aspirates

gram-positive cocci in chains - streptococcus

38
Q

When viewing s. equi microscopically, what do you see?

A

gram-positive cocci in chains

39
Q

How do you confirm diagnosis of strangles?

A

nasopharyngeal swabs
discharges from abscesses
guttural pouch lavage

PCR

culture

40
Q

Describe the cultures of s. equi

A

left: mucoid colonies
right: beta-hemolysis

41
Q

How do you treat strangles?

A

PENICILLIN
quarantine
live-attenuated intranasal vaccine
avoid overcrowding and mixing of different age groups