Title: DISEASE OF POULTRY
1DISEASE OF POULTRY
- DR. NAGY EÖRSNÉ
- Central Veterinary Institute, Budapest
- Department of Poultry Pathology
-
2ANTE MORTEM INSPECTION
- At the farm before transportation to the
slaughterhouse the poultry flock must be examined
by veterinarian. - A certificate must be composed on the results of
this inspection and the pre-life of the flock - If the certificate is available and it is
negative and it does not indicate the necessity
of special measures, the ante mortem inspection
at the slaughterhouse will include the
identification of transported flock and control
of injuries took place during transportation,
furthermore the examination of dead birds. - Based on these data and examinations the
veterinarian decides whether the flock will be
submitted to normal or special slaughter or
further special examination.
3Notifiable Diseases
- Former O.I.E. list A
- Newcastle disease (Paramyxovirus)
- Avian influenza (Orthomyxovirus)
- Duck plaque (Herpesvirus)
- Former O.I. E. list B
- Fowl cholera
- Fowl typhoid
- In case of these diseases the flock is
slaughtered separately mostly at the end of
the day- as it is not condemned
4Diseases of Poultry ?? Zoonosis
- Paratyphoid (Salmonellosis, except typhoid)
- Campylobacteriosis
- Chlamydiosis
- Tuberculosis
- /Anthrax/
5Inspection of the surface
- injuries (as consequences of transportation)
- inflammation of skinarthritissynovitis
(infection of Staphylococcus aureus) - Mareks disease (skin form)
6Inspection of visceral organs and the body
cavityBacterial infections
- Salmonellosis (Fowl typhoid)
- Pasteurellosis (Fowl cholera)
- E. coli septicaemia
- Staphylococcosis
- Streptococcosis
7Septicaemia
- haemorrhages and/or fibrinous inflammation on
seromembranes - pleuritis
- pericarditis
- air sacculitis
- liver, spleen conditions
- enlarged
- friable (associated with subcapsular
haemorrhages) - lungs, intestines, genitals
8Paratyphoid (Salmonellosis)Zoonosis
- S. Enteritidis
- S. Typhimurium
- S. Infantis
- S. Hadar
- S. Agona
- S. Saint-paul
- S. Bovis-morbificans etc.
9- Gram negative rods with filaments
- Sensitivity 70 C 5 min fresh meat - 2-3
weeks frozen meat - years - Pathology septicaemia (enlarged spleen, liver,
necrotic foci, enteritis (fibrinous inflammation
in caecum! - water fowl! ) - Total condemned for human consumption!
- Slaughterhouse hygenie, household
hygenie(contamination!)
10Fowl typhoid
- Salmonella Gallinarum/Pullorumadapted to special
hostGram negative rods without any filaments - sensitive to 70C 5 minin fresh meat for 2-4
monthin frozen meat for yearsin water for 4-6
weeks - Germinative transmission!
11Pathology
- enlarged spleen liver within small
necrotic foci - white-grey (necrotic) nodules in myocardium
in lungs in intestine - fibrinous inflammation of seromembranes
- degenerated follicles on ovary, salpingitis
- arthritis
12Poultry meat is partial condemned for human
consumption
- only the affected areas are condemned(mostly the
parenchymal organs and intestines - in case of
arthritis the legs are removed)
13Small intestine, caecum, liver
14 white-grey necrotic nodules in myocardium
(typhoma)
15TuberculosisZoonosis
- Mycobacterium avium
- Ziehl-Nelsen positive slim rods
- Main character acid- and alcohol-fastness
- Sensitivity (Pasteur)
- 85C - 1 sec
- 72-76C - 14-45 sec
- 62-65C - 30 min
16- Domesticated birds adult onlywild- exotic birds
(ZOO), ostrich - Pathology bad conditiongrey-yellow nodules of
varying sizes in - diff. organs- intestines-
bone marrow - Condemned for human consumption
17(No Transcript)
18Colibacillosis
- Gram negative rods
- septicaemia
- coligranulomatosis (intestine, mesenterium)
- CRD (Chronic Respiratory Disease)
- Partial condemned for human consumption
19Fibrin liver, heart(Mycoplasma, E. coli)
20Fibrin (heart, intestine)
21Chronic Respiratory DiseaseMycoplasmosis
- Mycoplasma gallisepticum
- Mycoplasma synoviae
- Mycoplasma meleagridis
- Mycoplasma iowae
- Mycoplasma anseris
- Mycoplasma cloacalae
- Mycoplasma anatum
- Ureaplasmas
22- Pathogenicy varied, mostly facultative pathogen
! - In general Mycoplasmas are colonizing mucosal
surfaces - They are associated with bacteria and/or viruses
(respiratory virus infection, E. coli,
Ornithobacterium..) - stressimmunsuppression (viral diseases,
mycotoxins..)
23Fowl cholera/Pasteurellosis
- Mainly in turkey, water fowl
- Pasteurella multocida acute form chronic
form - Gram negative coccoid-rodsSensitivity 60C 2
min - Pathology septicaemia arthritis
salpingitis fibrinopurulent meningitis
fibrinous inflammation of phallus - Septicaemia - condemnedChronic form partial
condemnation (except cachexia)
24Petechiae in the heart of goose(pasteurellosis,
erysipelas, asphyxia)
25Necrotic foci in the liver goose(pasteurellosis,
erysipelas)
26Erysipelas
- Water fowl
- Erysipelothrix rhusiopatiaeGram positive
rodssensitivity mild - septicaemia
- Diff. diagn. Pasteurellosis (septicaemia)
- Partial condemnation for human consumption
27Staphylococcosis
- Staphylococcus aureusGram positive coccus
- Ubiquiter, pathogen if enters through the skin or
mucosal membranes - Pathology septicaemia young birds
arthritis, periarthritis synovitis,
osteomyelitis - adult gangrenous dermatitis
(wings, legs) in broilers - Condemned or partial condemnation
28CampylobacteriosisZoonosis
- Campylobacter jejuniC. coli
- Microaerophyl, Gram negative, mild sensitivity
- It is an intestinal commensal in broiler
breeders, layer-type breeders, turkey. - Hepatitis (enteritis) in poultryEnteritis in
human Slaughterhouse and household hygiene!
29Chlamydiosis (Ornithosis)Zoonosis
- Chlamydia psittaci
- Intracellular
- Pigeon, turkeys, ducks, gees, pheasant
- Inhaling dust from feces or feather
- Slaughterhouse hygenie
30AnthraxZoonosis
- It occurs rarely in birds where the disease is
endemic. - Chicken are highly resistant.
- Ducks occasionally show the disease
- Ostriches are moderately susceptible, often with
high mortality. (Dis.of Poultry. Barnes)