Important Avian Diseases - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 40
About This Presentation
Title:

Important Avian Diseases

Description:

Chlamydia. Agent Chlamydia psittaci. Other C. trachomatis, C. pneumoniae (TWAR) ... Chlamydia. Mycobacteria. Viruses: Herpes. Adeno. Polyoma. Reovirus ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1273
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 41
Provided by: patr73
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Important Avian Diseases


1
Important Avian Diseases
  • CVM 6882

2
Overview of Important Avian Diseases
3
Additional Important Diseases
  • Liver Disease
  • Paramyxoviruses (Newcastle)
  • Adenoviruses
  • Serratospiculosis (Mid-east Falcons)
  • Salmonella
  • Pasteurella

4
Aspergillosis
5
Chlamydia
  • Agent Chlamydia psittaci
  • Other C. trachomatis, C. pneumoniae (TWAR)
  • Character Intracellular parasite
  • Infective form Elementary Body (EB)
  • Reproductive Reticulate Body (RB)
  • Infection Aerosal, water
  • Incubation Days to years
  • Zoonotic

6
Clinical Appearance Classical Psittacosis
  • Respiratory Involvement airsacculitis
  • Leukocytosis, heterophilia, monocytosis
  • Anemia
  • AST elevation, TP, bile acids
  • Hepatomegaly, splenomegaly\
  • Fibrinopericardititis

7
Avian Species Most Affected
  • Budgerigars
  • Cockatiels
  • Amazons
  • Macaws (most severely affected)
  • Love birds (endemic)
  • Pigeons
  • Not Cockatoos

8
Psittacosis Treatment
  • Chlortetracycline Impregnated Pellets -- 45 day
    treatment required
  • Oral Doxycycline
  • Injectable Doxycycline (1/w)
  • Fluoroquinolones

9
Diagnostic Dilemmas
  • Life Cycle of Organism
  • Stage of disease when sample is taken -- largely
    unknown
  • Latency -- may last for years -- no footprints
  • Variability in virulence
  • Sensitivity and Specificity of available tests

10
Diagnostic Tests 2 types
  • Antigen Capture
  • Antibody Detection

11
Antigen Detection
  • Kodak Surecell used on feces, limited supplies
  • Clearview -- lacks specificity, many false
    positives
  • PCR increased usage (cont. Research)
  • Growth in Tissue Culture -- gold standard,
    cultured from tissue or feces
  • Special stains-- Gieminez

12
Antibody Tests
  • Non-available for in-house testing
  • Grimes Latex Agglutination (he died)
  • Modified CF Tests -- variable
  • Numerous Indirect ELISAS
  • BELISA direct ELISA -- many false positives

13
Control in Breeding OperationsE.G. Commercial
Cockatiels
  • Testing - PCR or culture ( 10 - 20 pairs at end
    of breeding cycle or birds showing clinical
    signs)
  • Frequency Year 1- every 3 months
    Year 2 - every
    6 months Annually thereafter unless
    positive result Commence with year 1 after
    positive result
  • Positive case - quarantine, treat, retest 4
    weeks post treatment
  • Cull and treat
  • Test and quarantine any incoming birds

14
Avian Tuberculosis
  • Agents M. avium, M. genovense
  • World-wide distribution
  • Chronic ganulamatous disease
  • Agent is an Acid-Fast Organism
  • Diagnosis is made by cytological examination of
    affected organs

15
TB Clinical Appearances
  • Chronic Emaciation Liver involvement
  • Subcutaneous Granulomas
  • Diarrhea Intestinal Lesions
  • Dyspnea Pulmonary Consolidation
  • Paralysis Osseous Tubercles

16
Treatment and Control
  • Quarantine
  • Isolation
  • Depopulation
  • Antibiotics not recommended
  • Isoniazid
  • Ethambutol

17
Trichomoniasis
  • Agents T. gallinae, gallinarum
  • Vesogenic, mesogenic, lentogenic strains
  • Introduced from Europe
  • Commensal in Columbiformes
  • Target oral and pharyngeal mucosa, occasionally
    respiratory system

18
Trichomoniasis Continued
  • Appearance raised yellow-tan plaques embedded
    in mucosa, obliterating the choanal slite, palate
    or base of tongue
  • Transmission ingestion of live flagellates
  • Clinical signs difficult prehension, swallowing
    leading to debilitation

19
Trich Diffs and Treatment
  • Differentials Abscesses, foreign materials,
    Capillaria spp., Candida
  • Treatment
  • Metronidazole 30 - 50 mg/kg
  • Carnidazole 10 - 100 mg/kg

20
Herpes Virus Infections
  • Mareks disease - lymphoproliferative, neural
    disease
  • Duck plague - enteritis
  • ILT - chickens
  • Pachecos disease - hepatitis
  • Inclusion body hepatitis - raptors, cranes, and
    storks

21
Herpes of Falcons
  • Falconid HV-1 closely related to Columbid HV-1,
    the latter being the source for the former
  • Clinical
  • Lymphopenia
  • Acute Death
  • Signs of liver disease

22
Pachecos Disease
  • Psittacid HV-1,2,3
  • South American Origin
  • Cockatoos and Amazons die peracutely
  • Macaws die acutely
  • Conures (Nanday and Patagonian) incriminated as
    carriers, but ...

23
Management of Herpes Virus
  • No effective individual treatment although
    acyclovir will reduce death rate in an aviary
  • No vaccines available
  • Hygiene and Sanitation
  • Gyrfalcons and pigeons dont mix

24
Pox Viruses
  • DNA Virus -- many strains
  • Falcon Pox
  • Pigeon Pox
  • Fowl Pox
  • Peacock Pox
  • Canary Pox (most pathogenic)
  • High degree of host specificity

25
Clinical Aspects
  • Transmitted by biting insects - virus can live in
    salivary gland for several weeks
  • Disease Forms
  • Epithelial Crusts
  • Diphtheroid - Wet pox
  • Septicemic form -- Canary Pox

26
Treatment of Pox
  • Debride or cauterize lesions
  • Control secondary bacterial infections
  • Selective Vaccination
  • Canary
  • Chicken
  • Turkey
  • Others -- see Ritchie, Harrison, Harrison

27
Macaw Wasting Disease
  • Proventricular Dilatation Syndrome
  • Viral Etiology confirmed
  • Neurotropic
  • Myenteric Plexus of Mid g.I. Tract
  • Crop
  • Other neural tissue

28
Macaw Wasting
  • Species all psittacines, contagious
  • Signs may not appear for several months after
    exposure
  • Signs slowing g.I. Tract, undigested seeds in
    stool, cachexia,, dehydration, death
  • No treatment, no vaccination
  • Aviaries depopulate

29
Paramyxoviruses Newcastle (VVND)
  • Newcastle PMV-1
  • PMV2-9 PMV-3 causes mild neurologic signs in
    pigeons Clinical
  • Signs
  • Diarrhea, respiratory signs followed by
    neurologic signs (torticollis)

30
Budgerigar Fledgling DiseasePolyoma Virus
  • Highly infectious, stable
  • Causes
  • Budgerigar Fledgling Disease peracute death with
    near 100 mortality in birds lt 15d
  • French Molt feather dystrophy syndrome
  • Polyserositis in other psittacines with bleeding
    syndromes

31
Other BFD (Polyoma)
32
Other Polyoma
33
Polyoma (cont)
  • Diagnosis
  • Feather lesions indistinguishable from BFD
  • Antemortem Cloacal swab and culture
  • Postmortem DNA probes
  • Control
  • Isolation of shedders away from neonates
  • Control feather dust and other hygiene
  • Vaccinate -- killed vaccine available

34
Beak and Feather Disease
  • Circovirus Disease
  • Septicemia and peracute death in nestlings
  • Beak Necrosis,Feather Dystrophies, worsening with
    each successive molt
  • Endemic in wild cockatoos (Australia)
  • Also will infect New World Parrots

35
Beak and Feather
36
Beak and Feather (cont)
  • Diagnosis Signs, biopsy, DNA Probes
  • No treatment, no vaccination
  • No spontaneous recovery affected birds die from
    secondary problems

37
Liver Disease Causes
  • Infectious
  • G- Bacteria
  • Chlamydia
  • Mycobacteria
  • Viruses
  • Herpes
  • Adeno
  • Polyoma
  • Reovirus
  • Trematodes (esp. cockatoos)
  • Non-Infectious
  • Aflatoxicosis
  • Fatty Liver
  • Iron Storage Disease
  • Neoplasia
  • Protozoal
  • Toxoplasma
  • Trichomonas
  • Histomonas

38
Liver Disease Signs
  • Physical and chemical
  • Elevated AST, CK, Bile Acids
  • G. I. Stasis
  • Feather abnormalities
  • Chronically overgrown beak and claws
  • Hepatic Encephalopathy
  • Clinical
  • Weight loss
  • Weakness
  • Ascites
  • Biliverdinuria
  • Melena
  • Coagulopathy

39
Liver Disease Signs
40
Liver Disease Treatment
  • Fluids
  • Hyperalimentation
  • Lactulose
  • Antibiotics
  • Doxycycline
  • Enrofloxacine
  • Metronidazole or Clindamycin
  • Other Specific Chemotherapy as indicated
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com