Farm Animal Diarrhoea Flashcards

1
Q

What are the factors that are involved in development of farm animal diarrhoea?

A

Pathogens Calf factors (immune status, stress) Environment and Management

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2
Q

What are the pathogens that can cause farm animal diarrhoea?

A

E. coli Coronavirus Rotavirus Cryptosporidium Salmonella Coccidiosis Can also get mixed infections

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3
Q

What is ETEC?

A

Enterotoxigenic E.coli

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4
Q

What age to animals get ETEC?

A

Within the first 5 days post partum

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5
Q

How does an animal become infected with ETEC? And what other pathogen is associated with infection?

A

Ingestion, the bacteria colonise the small intestine. Rotavirus is commonly associated with this type of infection.

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6
Q

What genes are needed for E.coli to become pathogenic and how are they transmitted between bacteria?

A

Adhesive fimbrae and enterotoxin genes Conferred by plasmids, these can be on seperate plasmids or on the same plasmid

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7
Q

Which adhesive fimbrae serotypes of ETEC are zoonotic?

A

CFA I and CFA II

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8
Q

What is the mechanism of diarrhoea in ETEC infected animals?

A

Labile Toxin binds to Gs ADP-R subunit and leads to increased cAMP and activation of the CFTR (Cloride) channel. Cl is therefore secreted and Na and H20 follow this. Therefore there is a secretory diarrhoea.

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9
Q

How can ETEC infection lead to death?

A

Dehydration, metabolic acidosis and electrolyte loss can be fatal.

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10
Q

What are the two types of toxin of ETEC and are both vaccinatable against?

A

Labile Toxin - can vaccinate with (i.e. in colostrum) Stable toxin - too small to elicit an immune response

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11
Q

How is ETEC determined from a faecal smear/culture.

A

Adhesive fimbrae AND enterotoxin genes must be demonstrated.

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12
Q

How does rotavirus diarrhoea differ to that of ETEC induced diarrhoea?

A

Rotavirus results in malapsorbtion rather than active water secretion.

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13
Q

How is rotavirus related to mortality and how will general hygiene relate to its potential to infect?

A

High morbidity but low mortality. It persists in the environment and is shed by adults and older calves.

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14
Q

Where is coronavirus located in the gut?

A

Ileum, caecum and colon.

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15
Q

When is salmonella culture significant?

A

ALWAYS and it is a REPORTABLE disease to the AHVLA.

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16
Q

How does cryptosporidium cause disease?

A

It causes villous atrophy resulting in a malabsorpative diarrhoea.

17
Q

When does coccidiosis need to be investigated?

A

In older weaned calves (>3 weeks) that are losing weight as well as having diarrhoea/generally not doing well. Other signs include tenesmus and blood stained faeces.

18
Q

How are the pathogens describes diagnosed?

A

With faecal SAMPLE not swabs sent to a competent laboratory. Typing is necessary.

19
Q

Is the appearance of diarrhoea helpful in determining disease?

A

No

20
Q

What is the most common cause of diarrhoea on a farm?

A

Dietary issues.

21
Q

At what age are the different pathogens likely to be the cause of diarrhoea?

A
22
Q

What calf factors affect the chances of infection?

A

Accessability to colostrum

Dystocia

Competition

Cow factors - quality of colostrum, down cow, allowing to suck?

23
Q

What would a perfect individual cow pen be like?

A
  • Water and feed buckets outside of pens to avoid faeces getting into them - also clear out regularly to prevent pathogen build up
  • Not too close contact between calves - defecation into surrounding pens
  • Litter cleared out not just deep litter
  • Clean/seperate calving pens
  • Ventilation
24
Q

What should calves be fed?

A

Water - calves drinking milk for thirst will have it enter the rumen which will lead to diarrhoea.

Milk replacer

Cake for intestinal villi development

25
Q

What can cause diarrhoea in growing/adolescent animals?

A
  • Endoparasites
    • Ostertagia
    • Coccidia
    • Fluke
  • Nutritional
    • Rumen accidosis
    • Copper deficiency
  • Infectious
    • Salmonella
    • Mucosal disease
26
Q

What can cause diarrhoea in adult cows?

A
  • Infectious
    • Johne’s disease
    • Salmonella
    • Coronavirus
  • Nutritional
    • SARA
  • Parasitic
    • Fluke
    • Ostertagiosis
27
Q

What should one do when assessing diarrhoea/general farm health?

A

Inspect faecal appearance and particle size on the whole farm

28
Q

What causes Johne’s disease?

A

Mycobacterium avium paratuberculosis (MAP)

29
Q

What is the treatment for MAP?

A

There isn’t one. Adult cows with Johne’s will remain infectious. They should be culled on humane grounds. They could also be bred to beef.

30
Q

What age animals can be affected by MAP?

A

Young animals can be infected but disease only occurs in cows >2 years old.

31
Q

How can infection spread be prevented/controlled?

A
  • Prevent faeces from older animals
    • Calf pens/calving pen
    • Don’t spread slurry
  • Stop infected colostrum being fed
    • Dont pool colostrum
  • Prevent in utero
    • Detect subclinical adults
    • Dont buy infected stock
      *
32
Q

What are the different tests for Johne’s disease and their effectiveness?

A

ZN stain - sensitivity and specificity low

ELISA - low sensitivity but high specificity

PCR faecal - same as ELISA

Faecal culture - gold standary but only 60% sensitivity

Necropsy - 100% both