Title: Leptospirosis
1(No Transcript)
2(No Transcript)
3Leptospirosis
- Weils Disease
- Canicola Fever
- Harvest Fever
- Stuttgart Disease (Canine)
4Leptospirosis
- First detected in 1886 by Adolph Weil
- First isolated in 1907 in kidney tissue
- Occurs August-September in North America (unless
tropical settings) - Considered a re-emerging disease in USA
5Leptospirosis
- Flexible, filamentous bacteria made up of fine
spirals with hook-shaped ends. - Gram
- Spirochete
- gt 200 known serotype
- Survives in a moist environment for weeks-months
6Leptospirosis
Gram -
Hook shaped ends
7LeptospirosisPathogenesis
- Leptospires penetrate mucous membranes or abraded
skin and multiply rapidly upon entering the blood
stream. - They spread to the kidney, liver, spleen, central
nervous system, eyes and genital tract. - Initial antibody response clears most organs
except the kidneys where the infection can remain
and be shed for weeks to months. - Leptospirosis causes a severe vasculitis with
endothelial damage. Kidney damage, shock, heart
damage with arrhythmias. Liver damage with
icterus and low vit k levels - Eye disease-Uveitis
8LeptospirosisCanines
- Many do not show symptoms
- fever
- Acute Renal Failure
- Hepatic (liver) dysfunction
- Coagulation defects with bleeding
9LeptospirosisHumans
- Headache, chills, muscle pain
- Liver disease
- Kidney disease
- Meningitis
- Uveitis
- 100-200 cases annually
10LeptospirosisEpidemiology
- Disease is maintained in nature by chronic
infection of the kidneys of the maintance hosts.
The leptospires are excreted into the urine. - Infection is endemic in the maintenance host and
usually transferred animal to animal by contact
with infected water. Maintenance hosts are
infected early in life and do not develop
clinical disease.
11LeptospirosisEpidemiology
- Leptospires are transmitted to incidental hosts
by direct and indirect contact. - Direct contact (host to host) is via urine, body
secretions, Transplacental and thru the milk. - Indirect contact (via urine) in water, on bedding
or environmental contaminated products
12LeptospirosisReservoir (Maintenance Host)
- Cattle
- Cats (rare)
- Dogs
- Horses
- Pigs
- Rodents
- Wildlife (opossum, raccoons, skunks and many
other species)
13LeptospirosisDiagnosis
- MAT(microscopic agglutination test) a serologic
test requiring a dark field microscope. - Elisa tests-(humans) dogs?
- Darkfield microscopy if gt100,000 organisms.
- Culture (difficult)
- Florescent Antibody tests
- PCR
14LeptospirosisTreatment
- Many cases are not clinically apparent and the
goal is to eliminate the carrier state - Antibiotics (the sooner the better)
- Hospitalize with fluid therapy (isolation needed
here)
15LeptospirosisPrevention
- Elimination of carrier
- Vaccination for dogs
- Protection is serovar-specific
- Current vaccination is for 3 sero types and is
considered very effective - Past vaccination was for 2 sero types which are
no longer as important. The past vaccine was not
as pure as current vaccines and was commonly
associated with vaccine allergic reactions.
16(No Transcript)
17Infectious Canine Tracheobronchitis
- KENNEL COUGH
- Canine Respiratory Disease Complex
18Kennel CoughEtiology
- Multi-etiology syndrome
- Bordetella bronchiseptica
- CAV2-Canine Adenovirus type 2
- CPI-Canine Parainfulienza Virus
19Canine Kennel CoughSymptoms
- Disease is highly contagious and commonly occurs
where groups of dogs are congregated. - Symptoms commonly develop 4 days post exposure.
Almost always a history of exposure to other dogs - 1. dry cough
- 2. gagging
- 3. /- fever
- 4. Ocular discharge
20Canine Kennel CoughTreatment
- 1. Antibiotics
- 2. Antitussives (cough suppressants)
- 3. Bronchial dilators
- 4. Anti-inflammatory medications (prednisone)
21Canine Kennel CoughPrevention
- Vaccinationpreferably several days prior to
exposure to other dogs (kennels, groomers,
veterinary clinics). - Intranasal
- Injectable
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25BrucellosisBrucella canis
- Small gram negative coccobacillus
- Lives in mononuclear cells
- Essentially a pathogen of dogs and wild canines.
26Brucella CanisBrucellosis
- Most species including humans are relatively
resistant to B. Canis - Dogs are also susceptible to infection from B.
Abortus and B. suis which they acquire naturally
thru ingestion of contaminated after-births and
aborted fetus from livestock. - B. Canis doesnt persist for long in the
environment and common disinfectants inactivate
the bacteria
27B. CanisTransmission
- Through mucous membranes of the oral cavity,
conjunctiva or vagina. - Infected males shed the bacteria primarily in the
semen (sexual transmission) - Infected females shed the organism primarily
through vaginal discharge or through aborted
materials.
28Pathogenesis of B Canis
- Low rate of infection in the US and Japan
- Central, South America, Asia and North Africa
have higher rates. - Urban pets have a lower prevalence compared to
stray dogs. - Venereal transmission most common.
- Females shed organism up to 6 weeks after
abortion - Inutero infection of alive puppies possible
- Bacteria lives in the testicles and prostate of
intact males
29B. CanisSymptoms
- Usually show no symptoms in non pregnant females.
- Males show scrotal enlargement, scrotal
dermatitis and epididymitis. - Females in late gestation (40-60) days abort but
otherwise act normally - Less common symptoms diskospondylitis, uveitis,
renal disease and meningitis
30B. CanisDiagnosis
- Antibody tests (slide agglutination test)
- Culture (definitive diagnosis) blood and
semun(early on) - PCR-used in people
31B. CanisTreatment
- Difficult to cure with antibiotics.
(intracellular persistence of the organism) - Infected male dogs rarely recover
32B. CanisPrevention
- No vaccine is available
- Kennel isolation while attempting an antibiotic
therapy. - Euthanasia of infected individuals
33Brucellosis HumansBangs
- 100-200 cases yearly in the US
- Common in Mediterranean Basin due to tourists
consuming unpastuerized milk products (Village
Cheese). - Causes Relapsing fever attacks.
- Coordination between public health and animal
disease control officials is essential to
controlling the problem
34BrucellosisUndulant Fever
- Public Health Considerations
- Cooperative State and Federal Brucellosis
Eradication Program has reduced the incidence to
a very small number of herds in the United
States. - Brucellosis in Free-Ranging Bison is a threat to
the brucellosis states in states where the
Buffalo Roam.
35(No Transcript)
36Staphyloccis. intermedius
- Gram cocci, grape clustered
- Normal Resident of Healthy skin
37Staphylococcus gram , Grape Clusters
38StaphylococcusElectron Micrograph
39StaphylococcusS. intermedius
- Also is the most common cause of deep and
superficial pyoderma
40Pustule
- A small, elevated, purulent fluid-filled cavity
in the epidermis less than .5 cm in diameter.
Pustules are most commonly associated with
superficial pyoderma.
41PUSTULES
42Papule
- A small elevated solid skin lesion up to .5 cm in
diameter caused by the infiltration of
inflammatory cells. Usually pink or reddish in
color.
43StapS. intermedius
Papule
44Staph Skin InfectionDiagnosis
- Gram stain of unruptured lesions.
- Presence of Epidermal Collarettes.
- Lesion culture and Sensitivity
- Skin biopsy
45Gram StainPustule
46Epidermal Collarette
47Epidermal Collarette
48Epidermal Collarettes
49Staph PyodermaTreatment
- Broad Spectrum Antibioticsbacterial resistance
is a problem here. - Topical ShampoosBenzol Peroxide Shampoos
- Diagnosis and Treatment of Underlying Diseases
Hypothyroidism, Demodex, Cushings Disease
50Hypothyroidism
51Cushings Disease
52DemodexInfection