Lecture 18 strongyles of ruminants Flashcards

1
Q

what is the family and 2 genera of the strongyles of ruminants

A

family: chabertiidae
genera: chabertia and oesophagostomum

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2
Q

what are two features of chabertia and what are the hosts

A
bell shaped buccal capsule with NO teeth
1.5-2 cm 
tiny leaf crown
holds onto chunks of mucosa- tissue feeder
sheep, goats, cattle
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3
Q

where are chabertia located in the host

A

colon (LI)

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4
Q

what is the life cycle of chabertia

A
• L3 exsheaths in small intestine
• enters mucosal glands
• moults to L4
• L4 returns to lumen
• migrates to large intestine
• final moult in large intestine
- NO EXTRA INTESTINAL MIGRATION
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5
Q

what is the PPP of chabertia

A

8 weeks

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6
Q

what is the species of chabertia and what effects does it have on the host

A

ovina

  • feed on mucosa
  • cause hemorrhage
  • excess mucus production
  • diarrhea
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7
Q

what climate will chabertia occur in

A

chabertia ovina will be in temperate areas

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8
Q

how many worms of chabertia ovina are pathogenic and what is the fecundity of female worms

A

200 are pathogenic and females lay 3000 eggs a day (high fecundity)

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9
Q

what is the common name for oesophagostomum

A

nodule worms- large nodules in the small intestine

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10
Q

what are the 4 species of oesophagostomum, what host do they occur in and where in the host

A

Oe. radiatum, cattle, cecum
Oe. columbianum, sheep, colon
Oe. venulosum, sheep, cecum
Oe. dentatum, pig, colon

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11
Q

what is the lifecycle of oesophagostomum

and what is the PPP

A

L3 migrates into glands in small &/or large intestine L4 emerges and migrates to large intestine
- PPP is 5-6 weeks

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12
Q

what are the features of Oe. radiatum and what is its common name

A
cylindrical buccal capsule
small leaf crown (basically none)
no external leaf crown
cervical collar in 2 parts
- common name- the nodule worm of cattle
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13
Q

what are 3 effects on the host of Oe. radiatum and what is the host

A

• susceptible (young) host, no reaction
• resistant animals, intense reaction
• nodule filled with eosinophils, larva killed, caseous lesion calcifies
“pimply gut”
• nodules cause Hb & plasma proteins to leak into gut
• interfere with gut motility
• anorexia, reduced weight gains
• adults cause diarrhoea
• strong immunity by 12 months of age- no reaction after this therefore low pathogenicity
- host is cattle

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14
Q

what is the effect on the host of Oe. dentatum and what is the host

A
  • common parasite of pigs; more prevalent in northern states
  • life cycle as for Oe. radiatum; nodules much smaller
  • less pathogenic than Oe. radiatum
  • can cause unthriftiness in pigs
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15
Q

what are the two oesophagostomum of sheep and which one is more pathogenic, where are they found geographically

A

Oe. columbianum (more pathogenic)- northern NSW and Queensland
Oe. venulosum- VIC

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16
Q

what is a strongyle of the pig that has the eggs passed in the urine

A

stephanurus dentatus- kidney worm of the pig

17
Q

where are stephanurus dentatus worms found in the body of the host and what is the host

A

attached to the ureter or in the perirenal fat

pig

18
Q

what is the distribution of the stephanurus dentatus

A

limited to warm, moist areas in Australia

tropical and subtropical areas worldwide

19
Q

what is the lifecycle of stephanurus dentatus

A
• egg passed in urine****->L3 in 3-5 days
• L3 ingested or can penetrate skin
• migrate to liver via portal system (3
days) or aorta (8-40 days)
• migrate in liver for 2-3 months
• migrate to perirenal area
• may migrate anywhere in body
20
Q

what is the PPP of stephanurus dentatus

A

9 months

21
Q

what is the pathogenesis of stephanurus dentatus

A
  • migrating larvae can produce lesions, or abscesses anywhere in carcass
  • liver migration causes elevation in liver enzyme concentrations (AST)- diagnostic
  • affected pigs lose weight
  • organs condemned at slaughter
22
Q

what is the one important strongyle of birds

A

sygamus trachea- the gape worm

23
Q

where is syngamus trachea located in the host and what is the host

A

located in the trachea in birds (poultry)

24
Q

what are the features of syngamus trachea

A

cup shaped buccal capsule
up to 10 teeth
L1-L3 OCCUR IN THE EGG
and oh yeah…THE MALE AND FEMALE ARE ATTACHED- y-shaped, male is tiny

25
Q

what is the lifecycle of syngamus trachea

A
  • eggs coughed up and swallowed, passed in faeces
  • 2 moults occur within egg (L1-L3 within the egg)
  • egg or infective larvae (L3) may be ingested by birds, or slugs, snails and earthworms may act as
    paratenic (no development) hosts
  • larvae penetrate intestinal wall and are carried in the blood via the liver to the lungs, then
    break out into alveoli and migrate to trachea
  • prepatent period 2 weeks
26
Q

what is the pathogenesis of syngamus trachea

A
  • cause excess mucus production
  • block airways
  • respiratory distress - birds stand “gaping”
  • blood feeders
27
Q

how do you diagnose syngamus trachea

A

eggs (L1-L3) in feces

eggs are ellipsoidal and thin shelled with a thick operculum on both sides