Pig CV and Respiratory Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Which antibodies are produced in the airway and alveoli?

A
  • airway IgA

- alvioli IgG

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2
Q

How may defence mechanisms be damaged?

A
  • damage to nasal turbinates
  • damage to mucociliary escalotir
  • viral damage of macrophages
  • hypoxia induced reduction of macrophage oxidative phosphorylation
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3
Q

Which pathogen can exacerbate all other respiratory diseases of the pig?

A

PCV2

  • immunosuppressive
  • endemic on 90% farms
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4
Q

What age are majority of diseases seen in pigs?

A
  • post-weaning
    > weaning stressful!
  • change of feed, pens, mixing, no mother, medical tx
  • early weaning? can help minimise spread mother - young, can ^ susceptibility
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5
Q

Which pathogens/diseases cauuse NEONATAL respiratory disease?

A
  • actinobacillus suis
  • bordatella bronchisepticum
  • progressive atrophic rhinitis
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6
Q

Which pathogens/diseases affect pre-weaned pigs?

A
  • progressive atrophic rhintiis (bordatella bronchiseptica)
  • inclusion body rhinitis (pig CMV)
  • enzootic pneumonia (Mycoplasma sp.)
  • PRRSV (repro and resp syndrome)
  • Glassers disease (Haemophilus parasuis)
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7
Q

Which pathogens/diseases occour in weaner, growers and finishers?

A
  • bordatella bronchiseptica
  • glassers disease
  • actinobacillus pleuropneumonia
  • pasturella multiocida
  • mycoplasma hyopneumonia (EP)/hyorrhinis
  • PRRSV
  • PRCV (porcine resp coronavirus)
  • influenza
  • PMWS?/PCVAD
  • aujesky’s disease (pig herpesvirus 1)
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8
Q

Which pathogens cause significant respiratory disease in non-immune adult pigs?

A
  • Glassers disease (actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae)
  • Pasteuruellosis
  • Enzootic pneumonia
  • PRRSV
  • Influenza
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9
Q

What is the most common pig pathogen according to AHVLA case reports?

A

Pasteurella multocida

but most common will not have been reported to AHVLA!

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10
Q

Is mycoplasma hyopneumoniaueof economic importance? What disease does it cause?

A

YES!
- 30-80% pigs have lesions at slaughter
= enzootic pneumonia

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11
Q

How do mycoplasmas cause disease?

A
  • damage mucociliary escalator -> 2* infections

- cause disease themselves

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12
Q

Clinical signs and diagnosis of m. hyopneumomniae?

A
  • weaned pigs
  • coughing
  • v FCE
  • variance in growth rates
  • 2* infections
    > dx
  • clinical signs
  • lung lesions at slaughter
  • culture/PCR
  • histology
  • serology
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13
Q

Which pathogen has 12 subtypes? What type of disease does this cause?

A
  • actinobacilus pleuropneumoniae

- > explosive outbreaks pneumonia, ^ morbidity and mortality OR seroconversion with few clinical signs

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14
Q

Dx of APP? (actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae)

A
> clinical signs 
- acute fatal respiratory disease
- fibrinous pleuritis 
- firm lung infarcts (lesions largely produced by the toxins) 
> diagnosis
- culture
- PCR
- lung lesions 
- serology
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15
Q

Epidemiology of APP?

A
  • fighting after mixing (direct contact)
  • aerosol limited
  • survives in water/mucus
  • ifferent serotypes in different countries
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16
Q

Which pathogens cause atrophic rhinitis?

A
  • toxigenic pasterella multocida in association with bordatella bronchiseptica
17
Q

Is atrophic rhinitis common?

A

no, better management

18
Q

Pathogenesis of atrophic rhinitis?

A
  • colonisation of nasal mucosa by BS with production of cytotoxin
  • PM damages osteoblasts and enhances osteoclast activity
19
Q

Which pathogen causes Glassers disease?

A
  • Haemophilus prasuis

- Polyserositis

20
Q

Which pathogen causes Aujesky’s disease?

A
  • swine herpesvirus type 1

* notifiable* and not present in UK

21
Q

Clinical presentation of Aujesky’s disease?

A

dependant on age and strain

  • <15%
  • adult: few clinical signs (abortion, URT cough, rare neuro)
22
Q

Protocol for Aujeskys disease?

A
  • notifiable

- slaughter policy in UK, targetted vax in NI, spain