Farm Animal Anaemia Flashcards

1
Q

What are the clinical signs of anaemia in cattle?

A

Pallor, lack of exercise tolerance, weakness, haemic murmur, red urine, jaundice, dependent oedema, black faeces and swollen udder

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2
Q

What should always be checked in suspected anaemia cases?

A

MM of eyes, mouth, nose and vulva but remember normally pale in comparison to MM of other animals

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3
Q

What signs are seen on bloods of a farm animal with anaemia?

A

Low PCV and haemoglobin, immature erythrocytes, evidence of regeneration and jaundice

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4
Q

What are the normal levels of PCV and Hb in cattle, sheep and swine?

A

Cattle PCV = 24-46%, Hb = 8-15g/dl
Sheep PCV = 27-45%, Hb = 9-15g/dl
Swine PCV = 22-38%, Hb = 8-12g/dl

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5
Q

What are the characteristics of haemorrhagic anaemia?

A

Blood loss, regenerative anaemia

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6
Q

What can cause haemorrhagic anaemia?

A

Caudal vena caval syndrome, enzootic haematuria, ruptured uterine artery, ruptured aorta, haemonchosis, fasciolosis, lice, mites and ticks, abomasal ulcer

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7
Q

What are the signs of enzootic haematuria?

A

Haematuria with blood clots, frequent urination, thickened bladder +/- palpated on rectal, chronic progressive anaemia signs, internal bleedings

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8
Q

What causes enzootic haematuria?

A

Bracken fern toxicity

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9
Q

What causes abomasal ulcers?

A

Sand, DA or stress

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10
Q

How are abomasal ulcers diagnosed?

A

Occult blood in faeces/black stinking dung, free air in abdomen and abdominal pain

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11
Q

What are the characteristics of haemolytic anaemia?

A

Erythrocyte destruction and regenerative anaemia

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12
Q

What are the causes of haemolytic anaemia?

A

Leptospirosis, post-parturient haemoglobulinuria, protozoa (Babesia/Eperythmozoan), chronic copper poisoning, cold water ingestion, Brassica spp poisoning, drug induced, blood transfusion, autoimmune haemolytic anaemia

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13
Q

Which species and breeds are most/least susceptible to copper poisoning?

A

Sheep are more susceptible than cattle

Texels and Suffolk mos susceptible, Scottish Blackface and Merinos least susceptible

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14
Q

What is the mechanism of pathology of chronic copper poisoning?

A

Stored and accumulates in liver causing centrilobar necrosis if >750ppm resulting in sudden release of copper from liver into blood leading to an acute fatal syndrome

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15
Q

What are the risk factors for chronic copper poisoning?

A

Fed with concentrate feeds >4ppm needed for normal health and >12ppm may be dangerous and many commercial feeds exceed this

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16
Q

What are the signs of chronic copper poisoning?

A

Jaundice, pallor, haemoglobinuria, depression, death 24-48 hours post haemolytic event

17
Q

What is seen on bloods of animal with chronic copper poisoning?

A

Elevated blood and liver copper, increased plasma AST

18
Q

What is found on necropsy of animal with chronic copper poisoning?

A

Swollen yellow liver, swollen ‘gunmetal’ kidneys, jaundice

19
Q

How is chronic copper toxicity diagnosed?

A

Haemoglobinuria, jaundice and anaemia

20
Q

What is the treatment for chronic copper toxicity?

A

Ammonium tetrathionolybalate at 2.7mg/kg with 2-3 day interval and 3-6 treatments
Ammonium molybdate 100mg + sodium sulphate 1g oral daily
Sodium calcium edetate 70mg/kg IV for 2 days
Euthanasia

21
Q

What are the causes of depressed/inadequate erythrocyte production?

A

Cobalt/copper deficiency, iron deficiency, acute bracken poisoning, fasciolosis, lymphosarcoma, chronic renal disease, anaemia of inflammatory disease, radiation damage

22
Q

What are the signs of anaemia of inflammatory disease?

A

Alterations in iron matabolism, depressed bone marrow response, shorter lifespan of erythrocytes

23
Q

How is anaemia treated in farm animals?

A

Blood transfusion from dry cow, need 5L

Haematinics = Fe, Cu, Vit B12, high protein, fresh foods