4. Prevention and control of infectious diseases. Flashcards
1
Q
Aim for prevention and control of infectious disease?(3)
A
Aim:
- Prevention of introduction of the agents
- Localisation of the epidemic: prevent spread
- Elimination of the epidemic
2
Q
Vet administration rules: Notifiable diseases?
A
Vet administration methods
- Vet admin rules
Notifiable diseases
- most severe diseases
- Great economic impact, public health importance
- National Lists, EU lists, OIE lists
3
Q
1)Vet admin rules : International transport + General epidemiological rules?
A
International transport
- intro of certain infections, only certified transportations can happen,
- import bans can be implemented
- Certificates, traceability
- Import restrictions
- Quality requirements
General epidemiological rules
- All-in, all-out, disinfection
- Isolated keeping of different animal sp/age groups e.g. dog carries Brucella and can
- infect Su/Ru (younger may be more susceptible/older may have more resistance)
- Closed keeping, limited traffic (authorised personnel, vehicles)
- Introduction of animals to the farm: diagnostic tests, quarantine (at least 30 days)
- Isolation from wild living animals, rodents, birds e.g. ASF wild boar contact
- Arthropod control is important
- Rendering dead animals, waste
- Rules of hatching, transport of day-old chicken ʹ can only put marked eggs from
- 1 farm in the hatchery, has to be disinfected (easy place for infection)
- Disinfection very important, hatching boxes must be disinfected/use
- trays that can be disinfected
- Don’t mix the boxes
- Excluding carrier people: avoid unnecessary exposure and only healthy people can
- work/regular xray(TB),
- if have diarrhoea not allowed in poultry -salmonella/examinations
4
Q
1) Vet admin - specific measures, international cooperation regarding infectious diseases?
A
Specific measures (different in the case of different diseases)
- Specific for each disease
- Notifiable/Zoonotic/Diseases of great economic impact: strict measures
- closed herd, protection zone, observation zone, eradication/stamping out
- Diseases of smaller economic impact
- Movement restriction, closed herd
- Diagnostic examination
- Treatment, vaccination
International cooperation regarding infectious diseases
- OIE (Office International des Epizooties, World organisation for animal health) 1924
- International animal health code
- Manual of standards for diagnostic tests & vaccines
- FAO (Food & Agricultural Organisation) 1948
5
Q
2) Immune Prophylaxis- passive immunisation?
A
Passive immunisation
- Hyper-immune serum (artificial): homologous 2-3 weeks, heterologous 7-10 (horse in dog ʹ can cause allergy/hyperimmune reaction) days t1/2 ʹ high number of immunoglobulins
- Maternal immunity (natural) (yolk immunity in birds)
- Epitheliochorial placenta: colostrum
- Syndesmochorial: mainly colostrum
- Endotheliochorial: diaplacental + colostrum
- Immune globulin content of the colostrum is decreasing
- Enteral absorption of Ig is decreasing: 1st day is still good, then sharp decline at end of 1st day (calf) by 27th hr, is no absorption of Ig ʹ
- epithelial layer of gut is CLOSED: give 10% of weight of animal on first day! Calf =: 50kg, give 5kg colostrum
- enteral lymphocytes can be transferred
- Half life
- The number of maternal antibodies depends on: the antigen, nutrition of the dam
- Certain antibodies can inhibit the active immunisation
- Ig content of the serum can be detected
6
Q
Active Immunisation?
A
Active immunisation
- Factors influencing efficacy:
- agent, vaccine type, amount of antigen, method of vaccination, age & health state of the animal
- Live vaccines: give faster immune response,
- less antigen needed, stronger immune response
- Avirulent/Attenuated strains
- Naturally or artificially attenuated strains
- Inactivated vaccines: contain complete agent in inactivated (killed), Ag extract or subunit
- Adjuvants: help the immune response (longer release of the antigen) e.g. gel
- Polyvalent vaccines ʹ several agents are included in a single shot
- New generation vaccines
- Live vaccines:
- deletion vaccines (certain part of gene deleted that are responsible for the virulence) IBR
- vector vaccines(gene inserted into the gene of the pox virus that doesnt cause disease) BVDV
- Not living vaccines:
- Inactivated deletion vaccines
- Recombinant vaccines
- Virus like particle (VLP) vaccines: ISCOM
- Synthetic vaccines e.g. in case of FMD vaccine
- Nucleic acid vaccines (DNA, ss+RNA)
- Transgenic plant vaccines
7
Q
Chemoprophylaxis?
A
Chemoprophylaxis:
- Antibacterial - mostly only leptospirosis
- Control, eradication: 3 main eradication methods, others are less used but still possible
- 1. Selection (test & remove)
- used in small herds and if has low level of infection (if 80% should be slaughtered, farmer wont be happy
- repeated and controlled
- With vaccine: DIVA can combine with Vaccine
- 2. Generation shift:
- isolated keeping of new-borns
- replace infected parent stock with disease free young animals
- continuous production (dairy farm)
- 3. Herd replacement: quite expensive, all infected are slaughtered/get new to repopulate
- changing infected stock with disease free animals
- SPF method: specific pathogen free (free from certain diseases, efficient way of eradication),
- strict isolation
- Embryo transfer: expensive but reliable, more used in very valuable animals
- implantation of washed embryos into disease free dams
- Eradication with antibiotics: limited, leptospirosis
- Eradication of human infectious diseases: smallpox (1959-1979), poliomyelitis (some years),
- rubella, mumps
- Eradication of infectious diseases of animals: Rinderpest (2011)