100. Bradsot of sheep and Köves-disease of swine. Flashcards
Occurrence and ethiology of Bradsot?
Occurrence:
Northern Europe
x Etiology:
- C. septicum
- Late autumn-winter,
- winter pasture - colder,
- 1) Summer pasture Æ winter
- 2) Soil contaminated frozen feed (potato, turnip), sudden appearance
Pathogenesis and clinical signs of bradsot?
Pathogenesis:
- infection PO (soil contaminated frozen feed)
- Æ mucous membrane of stomach (rennet)
- Æ damage MM
- Gas gangrene in wall of stomach, duodenum
Clinical signs:
- sudden onset,
- General:
- depression,
- teeth grinding,
- pulmonary and heart failure
Pathology and diagnosis?
Pathology:
- Rennet,
- proximal small intestine (thickened, hemorrhagic - serous, necrosis of MM),
- fluid in abdominal and thoracic cavity
x Diagnosis:
- signs and PM lesions
- o Detection of agent:
- microscopy,
- culture (found in PM too),
- IF,
- PCR
Treatment and prevention, control?
Treatment:
- fast course,
- no time
x Prevention, control:
- prevention of predisposing effects
- vaccines (theoretically have vax, but better to prevent!)
Koves disease?
Occurrence: rare
Etiology: C. septicum
Indicator disease (hemorrhages in the stomach ʹ something in background like;
- Classical swine fever,
- TGE,
- mycotoxins,
- esophageal ulcer
Clinical signs:
sudden death
Pathology:
stomach wall thickend,
rubber-like,
serous ʹ gas bubbles sometimes in muscles
Diagnosis:
detection of agent (staining, isolation of agent), identification of the predisposing factors,
DDX!
Prevention, control:
prevention of predisposing effects,
vaccination is not used