13. Haemorrhagic nephritis and enteritis of geese. Flashcards
1
Q
Virus family and info?
A
- Family: Polyomaviridae
- 40-55 nm diameter, Icosahedral shape
- Non-enveloped: Very strong resistance, Infectious for month in the environment
- Double stranded, linear DNA genome (5 kbp)
- 5-9 proteins
- 3 structural proteins VP1, VP2 and VP3 (VP1 is the main, sometimes VP4 can be detected)
- Replication associated proteins (T-proteins)
- Use a viral transcriptase
- Good antigens, but hidden, and no cross protection
- Stenoxen (except birds), Oncogene ;(Mainly in mammals,in birds its an acute virus)
- Latent (integration in the chromosome of the cell)
- In tissue culture: microtumor
- Persistent
- Haemagglutination
- 4 genuses ʹ
- alpha: Bat, monkey, human
- beta : Human, monkey seal, elephant, rodent
- gamma: birds
- delta: human
- Polyomavirus: different signs in animals
- Mouse (wild): Persistent in the kidney
- House mouse: Multiplex tumor
- Hamster: Epithelial tumor in hair follicules
- Rat: Parotid tumor
- Rabbit: Vacuolization in the kidney epithelia
- Cattle: Persistent in the kidney
- Monkey: Persistent in the kidney and lymphoid cells
- Human: Persistent, in case of immunosuppression: leukoencephalopathy, nephropathy,
- haemorrhagic cystitis and tumor
2
Q
HNEG occurrence and epidemiology?
A
Haemorrhagic nephritis enteritis of geese (HNEG)
• 1969: Hungary
- Spread with Derzsy hyperimmune sera
- Later in Germany, Southern France and spread further
- 2000: goose haemorrhagic polyomavirus (GHPV)
- Isolation: embryonate eggs chorio allantois-membranes and goose primer kidney epithelial cells
- Cytopathic: graininess and vesicles
- Haemaggluttination: chicken red blood cells
- Duck can be seropositive, carrier
- Muscovy duck, hybrids and wild goose susceptible but remain symptomless with high virus titres
3
Q
Pathogenesis?
A
Pathogenesis (same like PARVO)
- Intake: per os, intranasal ➝ direct contact, infected food, water
- Replication: lymphoid tissues around throat (dividing cells)
- Viraemia: virus replication in blood endothelium, bursa, kidney and intestinal epithelium, B cells
- Virus shedding in faeces and urine
- Germinative infection has not been demonstrated
- After infection can give yolk immunity
- After infection can stay persistent carrier
- Vertical and horizontal transmission
4
Q
Clinical signs?
A
Clinical signs
- Mainly 3-10 weeks old
- Incubation period: 6-7 days
- Clinical signs appear few hours before death
- Shaking of neck and head, lethargy, diarrhoea and coma
- Mortality depends on age (4-67%) but can be 100% in goslings
- Chronic cases ➝ uric acid crystals
- Elderly shed the virus without symptoms
5
Q
Pathology?
A
Pathology: similar to derzsy
- Oedema of tissues under the skin
- Ascites
- Haemorrhagic nephritis and necrosis in tubular epithelia ➝ low levels of replication, consequence of blood endothelium necrosis
- Gout
- Hepatitis serosa
- Necrotising haemorrhagic enteritis
- Haemorrhages around the body (also in the brain)
6
Q
Histopathology?
A
Histopathology
- Interstitial nephritis
- Epithelial necrosis in the kidney
- Necrotizing enteritis
- Liver cell-degeneration and hepatitis
7
Q
Diagnosis and differential diagnosis?
A
Diagnosis
- Virus detection: Kidney, liver, spleen
- IF, (EM,) PCR
- (Isolation is not easy ʹ can do in embryonated egg/ Choroallantois membrane which is not easy which
- is why we prefer PCR or IF)
- Serology: ELISA, HAG, Sera
Differential diagnosis:
- Derzsy
- Circovirus
- (Marek, NDV, influenza)
8
Q
Prevention?
A
Prevention
- Epidemiology
- Vaccine (inactivated BFDV)
- Farm-specific vaccine to breeders
- Subunit vaccine (VP1)
- Protocol of using the vaccine
- Before hatching: 2 and 6 weeks before
- Breeders: 3 weeks old and 6 weeks old