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Mice diseases

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: Stout Last modified by: alberto Created Date: 2/11/2003 3:48:15 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mice diseases


1
Mice diseases
2
Bacterial diseases
3
MRM
  • Mycoplasma pulmonis is the cause of murine
    respiratory mycoplasmosis, or MRM
  • In the respiratory tract, M. pulmonis
    preferentially colonizes the nasal passages and
    middle ears

4
Etiology - Mycoplasma pulmonis
  • Most infections are subclinical- carried in
    nasopharynx
  • Disease induced by high cage ammonia or pathogens
  • Slow onset, chronic condition
  • Aerosol and direct contact
  • Proximal Airway Disease

5
Mycoplasma pulmonis
  • Early signs purulent nasal discharge, otitis
    media, sneezing, sniffling, porphyrin staining
  • Progresses to labored breathing, anorexia,
    lethargy, hunched posture
  • Bronchopneumonia

6
Gross Lesions
  • In advanced disease, the lungs can have
    gray-purple patches that often have a
    "cobblestone" appearance.
  • Pictures

7
The left lobe of these lungs from a mouse with
experimental MRM has a gray-purple "cobblestone"
appearance due to accumulation of inflammatory
cells in and around airways,
8
Diagnosis
  • Commercial ELISA and IFA tests are useful for
    health monitoring, but serologic testing can be
    complicated by potential cross reactions with
    other rodent mycoplasmas.

9
Treatment
  • Tetracycline limits losses
  • Enrofloxacin
  • Dosages p.58

10
Tyzzers disease
  • Clostridium piliforme is the cause of Tyzzers
    disease. It is a gram-negative, motile,
    spore-forming bacillus. It has been grown in
    embryonated eggs and cell cultures

11
Epizootiology
  • C. piliforme has a worldwide distribution and a
    wide host range, including rats, mice, gerbils,
    hamsters, guinea pigs, rabbits, dogs, cats,
    horses, nonhuman primates, and various wild
    species. Mice appear to be affected more often
    than rats.

12
Clinical signs
  • Many affected rats and mice are simply found dead
    without prior signs being observed. If present,
    clinical signs include lethargy, ruffled fur, and
    diarrhea, as indicated by fecal soiling of the
    fur.

13
Transmission
  • Transmission is presumably fecal-oral.
  • Possibilities include vertical transmission and
    introduction of spores via vermin contaminated
    feed or incompletely sterilized food, bedding,
    or water. Morbidity and mortality are highly
    variable.

term applied to various animal species regarded
as pests or nuisances and especially to those
associated with the carrying of disease.
14
  • The most consistent lesions in mice are multiple,
    pale, slightly depressed foci of necrosis in the
    liver, as seen here. Thickening and hyperemia of
    the intestine and pale areas in the myocardium
    also can be seen in some cases, but are not
    consistently present.

15
Pathogenesis
  • C. piliforme becomes established in the intestine
    as a primary infection, usually in the ileum,
    cecum, or both. It spreads via the portal
    circulation to the liver, and from there via the
    blood to other organs, chiefly the heart.

16
Diagnosis 
  • Since the organism cannot be propagated on
    artificial media, histopathologic diagnoses are
    made by demonstration of the bacillus in the
    enterocytes, hepatocytes or cardiac
  • myocytes  bordering necrotic foci in tissues
    stained with silver stains

17
Treatment
  •   Oxytetracycline at 0.1 mg/ml water for 30 days
    was reported to abate mortality of an epizootic
    in mice.  Treatment is usually not warranted

18
Salmonella
  • Salmonella enteritidis is a gram-negative
    bacillus. Salmonellae are identified according to
    serotype, of which over 1500 exist.
  • Virulence varies widely among serotypes
    enteritidis and typhimurium are most commonly
    associated with disease in rodents

19
Epizootiology
  • Salmonellosis was a major epizootic and enzootic
    disease of laboratory mice prior to the 1950s,
    but clinical salmonellosis in mice is now rare.
    Transmission is fecal-oral. Salmonellae in
    general are not very host specific, and carriers
    are common among exposed populations. Therefore,
    potential sources of infection for laboratory
    mice include vermin contaminated food, water,
    bedding, and fomites

20
Clinical signs
  • Most infections are subclinical.
  • Signs in mice infected with weakly virulent
    serotypes vary from none to occasional losses
    among sucklings and weanlings

21
Gross lesions
  • This mouse with salmonellosis has pale foci of
    necrotizing and suppurative hepatitis at the
    margins of the liver lobes (arrows). The spleen
    is greatly enlarged due to production of
    increased numbers of neutrophils, or myeloid
    hyperplasia.

22
Diagnosis
  • Diagnosis of salmonellosis is by culture and
    serotyping. Several sites should be cultured,
    including liver, spleen, mesenteric lymph nodes,
    blood, and intestinal contents.

23
Control
  • Special attention should be given to vermin
    control and procurement and storage of bedding
    materials and food, which are easily contaminated
    by wild rodents. If salmonellosis is diagnosed in
    a research facility, the facility should be
    immediately quarantined, the affected populations
    destroyed and their environment decontaminated.
  • ZOONOTIC disease!!!

24
Skin
  • Staphylococcus aureus is the major pathogen for
    the skin of mice and rats.
  • Staphyloccus aureus is a gram-positive coccus
    that typically grows in clusters. It commonly
    inhabits the skin, skin glands, nasopharynx, and
    intestine of many host species.

25
Epizootiology
  • Staph. aureus is a common commensal of many
    species. It also is common in the environment.
  • Human carriers can be an important source of
    infection for rodent colonies

26
  • Staph. aureus is associated mostly with
    dermatitis in the form of pyoderma or ulcerative
    dermatitis. The face, shoulders, neck, and ears
    are most commonly affected.

27
Staphylococcus aureus
  • Abscesses and granulomas, most commonly affecting
    the face and tissues around the base of the tail,
    also occur and can be associated with fight
    wounds

28
Staphylococcus aureus
  • The best methods of control are improved
    sanitation, frequent sanitizing of cages and
    other equipment, and elimination of equipment
    that could cause skin injury
  • Topical treatment with Nolvasan BID

29
Viral diseases
30
SDAV (Sendai Virus) SV
  • Sialodacryoadenitis virus (SDAV), another
    coronavirus (Parainfluenza 1), is one of the most
    common viruses found in laboratory rats and mice.
    It is highly contagious, and is spread by direct
    contact with infected animals or by respiratory
    aerosol

31
SDAV
  • The incubation period for SDAV less than 1 week.
    In naive populations, a sudden high incidence of
    overt disease with sneezing, porphyrin-stained
    nasal and ocular discharges (as seen in this
    image), cervical edema, corneal ulceration, and
    keratoconus may be the first indications of a
    problem

32
Sendai Virus
  • This image shows swollen submandibular salivary
    glands (arrows) in a mouse with SDAV. SDAV has
    tissue tropism for the submaxillary and parotid
    salivary, exorbital, Harderian, and intraorbital
    lacrimal glands

33
  • In rats and mice, few gross morphologic lesions
    are seen in uncomplicated Sendai infections. The
    lungs can be focally reddened and atelectatic
    with serous fluid visible in the pleural and
    pericardial cavities.

34
Mouse Hepatitis Virus (MHV)
  • Mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) and
    sialodacryoadenitis virus (SDAV) are frequently
    encountered coronaviruses of mice and rats
    respectively
  • Some primarily infect the gastrointestinal
    system some the respiratory tract some the
    brain

35
MHV
  • Mice (Mus musculus) are the only natural hosts.
    MHV is extremely contagious with prevalence rates
    exceeding 80 in outbreaks. Active infection
    lasts 2-3 weeks, during which mice shed the virus
    in gastrointestinal and respiratory excretions.
    Direct contact with shedding mice, contaminated
    cell lines, fomites, or airborne particles are
    the important routes of viral transmission.

36
MHV
  • An epizootic can produce nonspecific clinical
    signs in naïve, juvenile mice, such as runting,
    as shown here, or failure to thrive

not previously subjected to experimentation or a
particular experimental situation ltmade the test
with naive mousegt
37
MHV
  • This image shows large coalescing cream-colored
    friable foci (arrow) of necrosis that result when
    acute multifocal hepatitis progresses to chronic
    active hepatitis in nude mice. Gross pathology in
    immune-incompetent mice is more generalized and
    progressive than in immune-competent mice.

38
Mouse Hepatitis Virus
  • Enterotropic versus respiratory strains
  • Extremely contagious by many routes
  • Nursing pups diarrhea and mortality
  • Weanlings Obstipation
  • Adults Hunched posture, weight loss, rough hair
    coat, variable mortality
  • No latent infections- stop breeding
  • ELISA

39
Mouse Hepatitis Virus
  • Diagnosis of latent infections is dependent on
    the histologic demonstration of large,
    multinucleate syncytial cells (arrow) in the
    liver, brain, or mucosal epithelium of the
    intestine

40
Rotavirus
  • Rotavirus, another genus of the family
    Reoviridae, is associated with clinical disease.
    Rotaviruses affecting mice and rats respectively
    are mouse rotavirus, a group-A rotavirus
    associated with the syndrome, epizootic diarrhea
    of infant mice (EDIM)

41
Rotavirus
  • Epizootic Diarrhea of Infant Mice (EDIM)
  • Most susceptible birth to 17 days of age
  • Fecal-oral transmission
  • Yellow, watery diarrhea in 14-17 day old pups
  • Death with a full stomach (versus reovirus),
    shortened intestinal villi
  • Unapparent viral carriers
  • ELISA

42
EDIM
  • Neonatal diarrhea is the most prominent sign.
    Watery yellow stool accumulates around the anus
    and tailbase, soiling the coats of neonatal pups
    and their dams. Pups appear stunted and lethargic
    and have distended abdomens. Mortality rates are
    low

43
Rotavirus
44
Parasites
45
Myobia musculi, Radfordia affinis, and Myocoptes
musculinus
  • Common
  • Transmitted by direct contact
  • May be subclinical, or develop pruritus, scruffy
    coat, patchy alopecia, self-trauma, pyoderma
  • Typically found on back and head
  • Mist with ivermectin (0.1) for 3 weekly
    treatments

46
Myobia musculi
  • Myobia musculi lesions in a pet white mouse,
    characteristic of hypersensitivity to the mites.
    Intense pruritus, often directed at the neck and
    ears, leads to self-mutilation. Early lesions
    consist of subtle hair thinning on the dorsal
    neck and shoulders
  • Acariasis???

47
Myobia musculi
Single claw
48
Radfordia affinis
Two claws
49
Myocoptes musculinus
50
Pinworms
  • Common
  • Fecal-oral transmission
  • Usually subclinical, but may cause rectal
    prolapse
  • Fecal floatation (Aspiculuris tetraptera) or tape
    test (Syphacia obvelata)
  • Ivermectin misting (others more labor intensive)
  • Clean environment well

51
Aspiculuris tetraptera
52
Syphacia obvelata
53
Rodentolepis nana and Hymenolepis diminuta
  • Common tapeworms among pet mice
  • Roaches, beetles, fleas intermediate hosts
  • R. nana also transmitted directly, or by
    autoinfection (retroinfection)
  • Usually subclinical infection

54
Rodentolepis nana and Hymenolepis diminuta
  • Often find proglottids in feces instead of
    individual eggs
  • Zoonotic (more commonly R. nana because of direct
    transmission)
  • Praziquantel is effective

55
Rodentolepis nana
Polar filaments
56
Tumors
57
Mammary Adenocarcinoma
  • Most common tumor of mice
  • Mice have 3 pair of thoracic and 2 pair of
    abdominal mammary glands- glandular tissue may be
    found up around the body to the dorsum
  • Poor prognosis- anaplastic and very invasive

58
Mammary Adenocarcinoma
59
Tissue  Mouse mammary gland adenocarcinoma
60
MiscellaneousDiseases
61
Barbering
  • Animal model of trichotillomania
  • MOBS (Move Over Buddy Syndrome)
  • Alopecia (R.O. ectoparasites, dermatophytes,
    endocrinopathy)
  • Well demarcated area of alopecia without
    dermatitis- exposed skin appears normal
  • Commonly involves hair over the nasal and orbital
    regions, or over the dorsal cervical area
  • Separate out barber

62
Barbering
63
Bite Wounds
  • Males fight and abuse females
  • Bites often found on face, back, and genital area
  • May abscess
  • Nolvasan ( lance abscesses)
  • Separate offenders
  • Provide enrichment

64
Malocclusion
  • Genetic predisposition (autosomal recessive)
  • Incisors hypsodont
  • Inanition, starvation
  • Trim teeth with nail clippers (no scissor
    action)
  • Do not breed these mice

65
Malocclusion
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