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goat and sheep diseases (1)

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Title: goat and sheep diseases (1)


1
DiseasesBacterial
  • Clostridial Infections
  • C. perfringens type C (Enterotoxemia, Struck)
  • Common in sheep, goats, and cattle
  • Causes fatal hemorrhagic enterocolitis,
    enterotoxemia
  • C. perfringens type D (Pulpy Kidney Disease)
  • Disease of sheep
  • sudden death
  • C. chauvoei - Blackleg
  • C. septicum - Malignant Edema
  • C. novyi - Big Head, Black Disease
  • C. hemolyticum bacillary hemoglobinuria,
    redwater
  • C. tetani - Tetanus

2
DiseasesBacterial
  • Clostridial Infections
  • Source ubiquitous in environment GI tract
    contaminated feeds
  • Transmission ingestion contamination of wounds
  • Prevention vaccinate (multivalent vaccine
    available)
  • Treatment
  • usually futile
  • antibiotics
  • supportive
  • antitoxin for tetanus

3
Clostridium Perfringens
  • Causative agent Clostridium perfringens (normal
    flora GI sheep)
  • Clinical signs
  • Type A diarrhea neonates.
  • Type B (lamb dysentery endotoxin) acute bloody
    diarrhea young lambs gt high mortality.
  • Type C (lamb dysentery endotoxin) diarrhea in
    lambs lt 3 wks. And in adults struck.
  • Type D feedlot lambs high concentrate, eat
    excessive feed/ milk. Diarrhea (sheep can die w/o
    diarrhea in goats diarrhea than die),
    incoordination, excitement, circling, head
    pressing, convulsions and sudden death

4
Clostridium Perfringens
  • Diagnosis Clinical signs or necropsy
  • Treatment Penicillin and vaccinate with
    antitoxin in outbreak
  • Prevention vaccination, parasite control,
    gradual feed changes

5
Big Head
  • Causative agent Clostridium novyi, C. sordellii,
    or C. chauvoei (black leg)
  • Clinical signs (sheep) Head butting and fighting
    causes bruising or laceration and edematous
    swelling.
  • Diagnosis Clinical signs
  • Treatment Penicillin, broad spectrum antibiotics
  • Prevention Vaccinate 7/8 way - ewe 1 month
    before lambing, lamb 1 month and 2-4 weeks later
    booster

6
Black Disease
  • Causative agent Clostridium novyi Type B (soil)
  • Transmission ingestion of spores, flukes
    predispose them to black disease
  • Clinical signs Often found dead (endotoxins)
    respiratory distress, anorexia, and fever
  • Diagnosis Necropsy and culture/ gram stain -
    liver
  • Hemorrhage of SQ vessels, sub epicardial
    hemorrhage, kidney/liver - autolysis
  • Treatment Tetracycline
  • Control trematodes e.g. albendazole

7
Black disease. Dark brown swollen liver showing
necrotic areas (12 cm) in diameter surrounded by
a zone of hyperaemia Courtesy of FAO
8
Tetanus
  • Cause infection of open wounds by Clostridium
    tetani
  • Symptoms muscle stiffness causing an unsteady
    gait, animal looks anxious, convulsions, death
    results due to the animal being unable to breathe
  • Treatment Antibiotics- penicillin and antisera
    can be given but response is poor flush wound
    with hydrogen peroxide and treat with penicillin

9
Brucellosis
  • Causative agent Brucella ovis and B. melitensis
    (rare abortion) in sheep Brucella melitensis
    and B. abortus (ZOONOTIC) in goats. Gram
    coccobacillus
  • Malta fever in humans
  • Transmission sheep - veneral and goats
    ingestion of contaminated food, direct contact
    urine, feces, placenta, milk
  • Clinical signs
  • Sheep Abortion (rare), epididymitis,
  • goats abortion storms, lameness, mastitis,
    diarrhea, and depression
  • Diagnosis Agglutination tests or complement
    fixation
  • Treatment None

10
Caseous Lymphadenitis
  • Causative agent Corynebacterium
    pseudotuberculosis gram coccoid
  • Transmission direct contact with superficial
    wounds, ingestion, inhalation
  • Clinical signs Dyspnea, tachypnea, cough, and
    weight loss
  • Diagnosis Culture from TTW, radiographs,
    necropsy (hepatic abscess)
  • Treatment Isolation, hygiene and vaccine?

11
Caseous Lymphadenitis (contd)
12
Caseous Lymphadenitis (contd)
13
Chlamydophilosis Enzootic abortion ewes (EAE)
  • Causative agent Chlamydia psittaci (zoonotic)
    gram -
  • Transmission Direct contact uterine discharge,
    fetus, placenta veneral (rams are carriers)
  • Clinical signs Abortion (1 cause in goats)
    last trimester, weak or stillborn lambs,
    pneumonia epididymitis, and polyarthritis
  • Diagnosis ELISA, fluorescent antibody staining,
    and culture isolation
  • Treatment Oxytetracycline females that have
    aborted should be isolated fetal tissue or
    placenta should be burned or buried and
    management
  • Prevention vaccine (prevent abortions)

14
Joint ill
  • Causative agent Kids, Staphylococci,
    streptococci, Corynebacterium spp., Actinomyces,
    and coliform bacteria
  • Transmission breaks in skin, umbilical cord, GI,
    respiratory tract
  • Clinical signs Warm, painful, swollen joints,
  • lameness, fever, umbilical cord abcessation,
  • and leukocytosis with left shift
  • Diagnosis Clinical signs
  • Treatment Penicillin's and joint flushing
    (saline)
  • Prevention avoid overcrowding and hygiene at
    partiurition, dipping umbilical cord

15
Vibriosis
  • Causative agent Campylobacter jejuni and C.
    fetus, gram rod
  • Transmission ingestion of organisms (intestines
    of sheep, birds, dogs)
  • Clinical signs Late-term abortion (1 sheep),
    stillbirths, and weak lambs
  • Diagnosis Culture
  • Treatment Antibiotics and vaccination

16
Metritis
  • Causative agent Clostridium spp. After dystocia,
    retained placenta
  • Clinical signs Vaginal discharge malodorous
    brownish-red watery
  • Diagnosis Clinical signs
  • Treatment Prostaglandins and oxytocin

17
DiseasesBacterial
  • Anthrax
  • Agent Bacillus anthracis
  • Animals sheep, cattle, goats
  • Transmission abrupt climate changes lead to
    spore release spores ingested by grazing
    animals (sheep cattle more than goats)
  • Clinical signs swelling around shoulders,
    ventral neck, and thorax bloody secretions
    death
  • Prevention vaccination with Sterne-strain spore
    vaccine
  • Zoonotic

18
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19
DiseasesBacterial
  • Corynebacterium renale group
  • C. renale
  • Normal inhabitant of bovine genitourinary tract
  • acute pyelonephritis in cattle results from
    ascending infection following a compromise of
    protective mechanisms
  • Tx penicillin (3 weeks)
  • C. pilosum C. cystitidis
  • Normal inhabitants of prepuce of sheep and goats
  • Posthitis (pizzle rot) and vulvovaginitis
  • high-protein diets increase urinary pH ammonia
    irritates prepucial and vulvar skin, increasing
    vulnerability
  • Tx decrease dietary protein

20
DiseasesBacterial
  • Foot Rot of Sheep and Goats
  • Cause Fusobacterium necrophorum (normal
    inhabitant) and Dichelobacter nodosus
    (environmental contaminant)
  • Most common cause of lameness in sheep
  • Prevention
  • maintain dry, clean environment
  • reject clinical cases at delivery
  • vaccinate
  • Treatment
  • foot baths - 10 formalin or 10 zinc sulfate or
    10 copper sulfate
  • penicillin and streptomycin
  • trim affected tissue

21
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22
DiseasesBacterial
  • Tuberculosis
  • Cause Acid-Fast Bacteria
  • Mycobacterium bovis (sheep, goats, cattle)
  • Mycobacterium avium (sheep, goats)
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis (goats)
  • Signs
  • may be asymptomatic
  • dyspnea, coughing, and pneumonia
  • diarrhea, bloat, constipation
  • Prevention intradermal tuberculin test, cull and
    slaughter
  • Treatment None
  • Zoonotic

23
DiseasesBacterial
  • Johnes Disease (Paratuberculosis)
  • Chronic, contagious, granulomatous disease of
    adult ruminants
  • Cause Mycobacterium paratuberculosis (acid-fast)
  • Long incubation period
  • Signs chronic wasting, pasty feces, diarrhea
  • Transmission direct or indirect contact
  • Prevention Test and slaughter
  • Treatment None

24
DiseasesBacterial
  • Contagious Caprine Pleuropneumonia
  • Cause Mycoplasma mycoides biotype F38
  • Signs severe dyspnea, nasal discharge, cough,
    and fever
  • High morbidity and mortality
  • Transmission aerosol
  • Prevention vaccinate quarantine
  • Treatment Tylosin and Oxytetracycline

25
DiseasesBacterial
  • Q-Fever
  • Highly contagious disease of sheep and goats
  • Agent Coxiella burnetti - rickettsial organism
  • Transmission
  • Ixodid or Argasid ticks
  • Ingestion of infected materials (placenta, milk,
    urine , feces, nasal secretions)
  • Major cause of late abortion in sheep
  • Usually asymptomatic in cattle and goats
  • Treatment oxytetracycline
  • Zoonotic (single organism shown to cause disease)

26
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27
Viral disease
28
DiseasesViral
  • Bluetongue Virus
  • Most common ulcerative disease of sheep in US
    (less common in goats and cattle)
  • Cause
  • Reoviridae family, Orbivirus genus
  • Transmission biting midge (Culicoides
    variipennis)
  • Signs
  • hemorrhage and ulcers in mouth and nose, cyanosis
    of the tongue, ulcerations of coronary band,
    lameness, pneumonia, abortions, diarrhea, death
  • Prevention modified live virus vaccine
  • Treatment supportive care
  • Reportable disease (resembles FMD)

29
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30
DiseasesViral
  • Caprine Arthritis Encephalitis Virus
  • Most important viral disease of goats
  • Cause Lentivirus
  • Transmission
  • vertical via colostrum and milk
  • Signs
  • progressive arthritis (six months and older)
  • Carpal joint most common, followed by stifle,
    hock, and hip
  • neurological symptoms in kids
  • pneumonia (older animals)
  • mastitis (older animals)
  • Prevention
  • remove kids at birth test and cull
  • Treatment None Infection is lifelong

31
DiseasesViral
  • Border Disease (Hairy Shaker Disease)
  • Primarily a disease of sheep
  • Cause Pestivirus closely related to BVD virus
  • Transmission PI animals shed virus in urine,
    feces, and saliva
  • In Utero infections result in
  • early embryonic death
  • abortion
  • developmental abnormalities - tremor, hirsutism,
    hypothyroidism, CNS defects, joint abnormalities
  • Prevention Vaccinate with killed BVDV vaccine
  • Treatment supportive care

32
DiseasesViral
  • Contagious Ecthyma (Orf)
  • Viral infection of sheep and goats
  • Cause parapoxvirus - capable of surviving for
    years
  • Usually seen in young animals
  • Signs
  • lesions and scab formation around mouth,
    nostrils, eyes, non-wooled areas around mammary
    gland and vulva
  • Most commonly at commissures of mouth
  • Infected lactating ewes may abandon lambs
  • Treatment supportive
  • Prevention
  • Vaccinate
  • Disinfect equipment etc. in between use
  • Zoonotic

33
DiseasesViral
  • Ovine Progressive Pneumonia Virus
  • Cause Lentivirus
  • Signs
  • after long incubation period (up to 2 years)
  • progressive weight loss, pneumonia, lameness,
    paralysis, mastitis, death
  • Transmission
  • horizontal (aerosol)
  • vertical - in utero and via infected milk and
    colostrum
  • Prevention
  • Test and cull
  • Remove lambs from ewes at birth
  • Treatment none

34
DiseasesViral
  • Pulmonary Adenomatosis (Jaagsiekte)
  • Rare Disease
  • progressive respiratory signs (dyspnea,
    hyperpnea) and wasting
  • Incubation up to 2 years
  • Cause Type D retrovirus
  • Transmission aerosol
  • Treatment None

35
Diseases
  • Tranmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies
  • Caused by prion (nonantigenic replicating
    proteins)
  • Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
  • Incubation period of years
  • Progressive neurological illness
  • Scrapie
  • More common in sheep than goats
  • Affects young animals, but incubation 2-5 years
  • Signs excitable, tremors of head and neck
    muscles, uncoordinated movements, bunny
    hopping, severe pruritis, blindness, death
    within 4-6 weeks
  • Suffolk especially susceptible Targhee resistant
  • USDA prohibits feeding mammalian proteins to
    ruminants
  • Reportable

36
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37
DiseasesViral
  • Vesicular Stomatits
  • Agent Vesicular Stomatitis Virus (Rhabdoviridae)
  • Disease of Cattle rarely sheep (also horses
    swine)
  • Signs vesicles on oral MM, teats and
    interdigital spaces, ulcers and erosions
    anorexia, salivation
  • Transmission secretions spread by fomites, human
    hands, possibly contaminated feed and water, and
    possible some flying insects (mechanical vectors)
  • Treatment segregate topical antibiotics for 2o
    infections
  • Prevention vaccine during outbreak
  • Reportable because similarity to FMD
  • Zoonotic flu-like disease in humans

38
DiseasesViral
  • Viral Diarrhea Diseases
  • 1o young animals
  • Sheep
  • Rotaviruses, Coronaviruses
  • Goats
  • Rotaviruses, Coronaviruses, Adenoviruses
  • Cattle
  • Rotaviruses diarrhea is typically distinctive
    yellow may become zoonotoic
  • Coronaviruses
  • Parvoviruses
  • Winter Dysentary diarrhea has distinctive musty
    sweet odor, light brown and bubbly
  • Prevention good quality colostrum

39
Parasitic diseases
40
DiseasesParasitic
  • Coccidiosis (protozoa)
  • Causes hemorrhagic diarrhea in ruminants
  • Transmitted via ingestion of sporulated oocysts
  • Treatment
  • Coccidiostats preferable to coccidiocidals
    because the former allow development of immunity
  • Sulfonamides, amprolium, decoquinate, lasalocid,
    monensin
  • Cryptosporidiosis (protozoa)
  • Common cause of diarrhea in young ruminants
  • Dx oocysts in iodine-stained feces fecal floats
    without sugar
  • Tx none - self-limiting
  • Zoonotic

41
DiseasesParasitic
  • Trichomoniasis
  • Agent Tritrichomonas fetus (protozoa)
  • Signs infertility, pyometras, abortions
  • Organism does not interfere with conception
    embryonic death occurs within 2 months of
    infection
  • Transmission venereal
  • Prevention vaccinate cull chronically infected
    bulls
  • Treatment imidazole effective, but cannot be
    used in food animals

42
DiseasesParasitic
  • Nematodes
  • Haemonchus contortus (barber pole worm)
  • Most important internal parasite of sheep and
    goats
  • Anemia, hypoproteinemia, intermandibular and
    cervical edema
  • Ostertagia circumcincta (medium stomach worm)
  • Sheep and goats
  • Ostertagia ostertagia (cattle stomach worm)
  • Most pathogenic and costly cattle nematode
  • Dictyocaulus (lungworms)
  • Various respiratory signs in all ruminants
  • Tx Ivermectin, Levamisole

43
DiseasesParasitic
  • Trematodes
  • Fascioliasis (liver fluke disease)
  • Agents
  • Fasciola hepatica
  • Fascioloides magns
  • Dicrocelium dendriticum
  • Intermediate host usually a freshwater snail
  • Signs of acute liver disease related to migration
    of immature flukes through the liver
  • Chronic disease from damage to bile ducts and
    cholangiohepatitis
  • Predisposes to invasion with Clostridial spp.
  • Necropsy livers pale and friable /- migration
    tunnels
  • Tx albendazole

44
Fungal diseases
45
DiseasesFungal
  • Dermatophytosis (Ringworm)
  • Common fungal infection of cattle
  • Trichophyton verrucosum is 1o agent
  • Signs multiple, gray, crusty, circumscribed,
    hyperkeratotic lesions around head, neck and ears
  • Dx Dermatophyte Test Media (DTM)
  • Spontaneous recovery 1-4 months
  • Treatment
  • Topical 2-5 lime-sulfur solution, 3 captan,
    iodophors, thiabendazole, and 0.5 hypochlorite
  • Systemic griseofulvin
  • Zoonotic

46
Metabolic disease
47
DiseasesMetabolic
  • Rumen Tympany (Bloat)
  • Frothy bloat - excessive ingestion of highly
    fermentable carbohydrates
  • Treatment
  • Mineral oil, household detergents, or
    anti-fermentatives via stomach tube
  • Trocarize rumen
  • Free gas bloat
  • Interference with normal eructation mechanism
  • Esophageal obstruction, vagal nerve paralysis,
    some CNS conditions
  • Prevention
  • withhold feed for at least 24 hours prior to
    anesthesia, etc.
  • Treatment
  • pass stomach tube
  • trocarize rumen

48
DiseasesMetabolic
  • Lactic Acidosis (Grain overload)
  • Cause excessive ingestion of highly fermentable
    carbohydrates
  • Leads to shift from gram-negative rumen bacterial
    population to gram-positive Streptococcus and
    Lactobacillus
  • Lactic acid acidifies the rumen leading to
    inflammation
  • ? ulcers, liver abscesses, laminitis,
    polioencephalomalacia
  • Prevention
  • avoid sudden dietary changes
  • avoid over feeding of high carbohydrate diets
  • Treatment
  • IV fluids
  • magnesium hydroxide intraruminal Na bicarb IV
  • flush rumen or rumenotomy
  • transfaunation

49
DiseasesMetabolic
  • Traumatic Reticulitis-Reticulopertonitis
  • Also Traumatic Reticulitis-Pericarditis
  • Aka. Hardware disease
  • Cattle, rarely small ruminants
  • Caused by ingestion of sharp metallic objects
    which drop into the reticulum penetrates the
    reticulum further migrations may lead to
    penetration of the diaphragm and pericardium
  • Prevention
  • Eliminate sharp objects in food and environment
  • Forestomach magnets

50
DiseasesMetabolic
  • Pregnancy Toxemia (Ketosis, Twin Lamb Disease)
  • 1o in Sheep and Goats that are overweight or
    bearing twins
  • Seen in during late gestation or early lactation
  • Signs
  • depression, anorexia, weakness, neurologic signs,
    fetal death, ketonuria
  • Cause inadequate glucose production secondary to
    increased requirements
  • Prevention increase nutrition
  • Treatment
  • IV fluids, IV glucose, B vitamins, propylene
    glycol, induce abortion or c-section
  • Protein Energy Malnutrition in heifer cattle is
    similar, but generally not associated with
    overconditioning or twins

51
DiseasesMetabolic
  • Hypocalcemia (Parturient Paresis, Milk Fever)
  • Sheep overweight ewes during last six weeks of
    gestation or first few weeks of lactation
  • Signs muscle tetany, incoordination, paralysis,
    coma, death
  • Goats not as common
  • Signs bloated, weak, unsteady, recumbent
  • Cattle 24-48 hours before/after parturition
  • Signs weak, muscle tremors, inability to stand,
    coma, death
  • Cause
  • calcium needs exceed bodys uptake of calcium
  • Prevention
  • Maintain proper nutrition during last trimester
  • appropriate CaP ratio
  • limit Ca intake early on
  • Treatment IV calcium borogluconate, calcium gels
    boluses

52
DiseasesMetabolic
  • Urinary Calculi (Obstructive Urolithiasis, Water
    Belly)
  • Rare in ruminants
  • Urethral blockage
  • male sheep and goats pizzle
  • male cattle sigmoid flexure
  • Signs
  • treading, straining, arched back, raised tail,
    squatting, pizzle may be discolored
  • Type 1o struvite
  • Prevention
  • diet with 21 CaP ratio, ? dietary roughage and
    salt, add ammonium chloride to diet
  • Treatment
  • surgical - amputate pizzle, perineal urethrostomy

53
DiseasesMetabolic
  • Copper Intoxication
  • 1o a disease of sheep
  • Acute hemolytic crisis
  • sudden weakness, recumbency, hemoglobinuria,
    intravascular hemolysis, anemia, icterus, sudden
    death
  • Cause chronic ingestion of copper
  • Feeding cattle feeds and concetrates to sheep
  • Copper-containing pesticides
  • Soil additives
  • Prevention Feed proper ration
  • Treatment
  • ammonium molybdenate, sodium molybdenate,
    D-penicillamine, transfusion

54
DiseasesMetabolic
  • Selenium/Vitamin E Deficiency (White Muscle
    Disease)
  • A nutritional muscular dystrophy
  • Two forms
  • Cardiac - seen most often in neonates
  • Respiratory difficulty due to damage of cardiac,
    diaphragmatic, and intercostal muscles locomotor
    disturbances and circulatory failure
  • Skeletal
  • Reluctant to move painful muscles
  • Cause Selenium (most common) and/or Vit. E
    Deficiency
  • Prevention proper diet awareness of regional
    selenium deficiencies
  • Treatment injectable selenium and/or Vitamin E

55
DiseasesMetabolic
  • Thiamine Deficiency (Polioencephalomalacia)
  • Animals affected
  • Adult ruminant on high-concentrate diets most
    common
  • Ruminants exposed to toxic plants or moldy feed
    containing thiaminases
  • Ruminants on high-sulfate feeds
  • Signs bruxism, hyperesthesia, involuntary muscle
    contractions, opisthotonus, seizures, wandering
    aimlessly, head-pressing, death
  • Prevention provide enough high quality roughage
    to prevent overgrowth of thiaminase-producing
    ruminal flora
  • Treatment thiamine hydrochloride

56
Managemental disease
57
DiseasesManagement-Related
  • Failure of Passive Transfer
  • Laminitis
  • Photosensitization - 2o (liver dz) most common)
  • Vaginal Uterine Prolapses
  • Rectal Prolapses
  • Trichobezoars

58
Neoplastic disease
59
DiseasesNeoplastic
  • Neoplasia and tumors relatively rare in ruminants
  • Sheep
  • Lymphosarcoma/leukemia results from a virus
    related to BLV
  • Pulmonary carcinoma (pulmonary adenomatosis)
  • Goats
  • Thyloma
  • Cutaneous papillomas which may progress to SCC
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