66. African horse sickness, equine encephalosis. Flashcards
1
Q
African Horse sickness History/Occurrence?
A
African horse sickness - NOTIFIABLE
- Vector transmitted disease of equids with acute, febrile, endothelia damages, oedema, haemorrhages,
- pulmonary & cardiac disorders ʹ circulatory problems of the lungs ʹ HIGH MORTALITY
History, occurrence
- First description on epizootics in central & S. Africa (1569)
- Present in several parts of Africa (mainly in S. Africa)
- Introductions to other regions: 1959-63 (ZOO!) Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iran, India; 1966, 1987-90
- Spain, 1989 Portugal
2
Q
Causative agent/ Epizootiology African horse Sickness?
A
Causative agent:
- African horse sickness virus (AHSV), Orbivirus genus, Reoviridae
- Orbivirus, at least 9 serotyoes, diverse virulence
- Susceptibility: equids: horse, donkey, zebra; rarely other sp: elephant, camel, dog, ferret
Epizootiology
- Arthropod vectors
- Midges/gnats (Culicoides spp), biological vectors
- Mosquitoes (Culicidae), more mechanical vector
- Rarely ticks (Hyaloma, Ripicephalus), more mechanical vector
- Natural reservoirs: probably zebras (less susceptible)
- Viraemia: horse ʹ 4-8 (18) days; zebra, donkey: 28 days
- Infected horses shed virus through semen, urine, discharges too
- Infection of carnivores ʹ consumption of infected horse meat, blood or organs
3
Q
African horse sickness Pathogenesis?
A
Pathogenesis:
- Vector injects
- Primary virus multiplication in the lymphatic tissue
- Viraemia ʹ lymphatic & BV endothel damage (LUNG & SC TISSUE)
- Oedema, haemorrhages ʹ pulmonary oedema, cardiopathy ʹ death
- Mortality: horse 70-96%, mule 50%, donkey 10%, zebra survives
4
Q
African horse sickness Clinical signs?
A
Clinical signs:
- after 5-7 (2-14) days incubation
- Peracute, pulmonary form
- Fever (40-41oC) general weakness, sweating, red conjunctiva
- Dyspnoea (60-75/min), foamy nasal discharge, coughing
- Sudden death (w/in 24h)
- Acute, respiratory form ʹ fever (40-41oC), respiratory signs, death w/in 1 week
- Subacute, cardiac, oedematic form (the most frequent)
- Fever (39-41oC for 3-6 days)
- Oedema around the eyes, lips, head, tongue, throat (Hippo head͟)
- Later neck, chest oedema
- In final stage haemorrhage in the conjunctiva & on underside of the tongue
- The horse dies of cardiac dysfunction 4-8 days after the onset of the signs
- If survives, oedema disappears w/in 3-8 days
- Mixed form (respiratory & cardiac) ʹ fever (40-41oC), milder respiratory signs, oedema,mortality
- Chronic, febrile form
- Recurrent fever (in the mornings lower, in the afternoons higher max 40oC)
- Rarely other signs, reddish conjunctiva
- Mainly in donkeys, zebras, immune horses (vaccine/recovered)
5
Q
Pathology, Histopathology?
A
Pathology, histopathology
- Pulmonary oedema, hydrothorax, hyperaemia
- Oedema under the skin & in the CT
- Haemorrhages in the mucosa, hyperaemic visceral organs
- Fibrinous exudate in the thoracic cavity
- Haemorrhages on the serosal surfaces, kidney cortex, on the spleen
- Epi- & endocardial haemorrhage
6
Q
Diagnosis?
A
Diagnosis
- Clinical signs, pathology, epizootiology ʹ suspicion
- Communicable disease ʹ laboratory diagnosis is necessary
- Virus isolation ʹ suckling mouse brain, BHK, vero cells
- Reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction, PCR, Ag-ELISA
- Serology ʹ ELISA, (CF, AGID, VN)
7
Q
African horse sickness Differential diagnosis?
A
Differential diagnosis
- (mainly based on case history)
- Equine infectious anaemia ʹ
- chronic, anaemia, decreasing condition
- Equine viral arteritis ʹ usually milder, typically abortions
- Babesiosis ʹ anaemia, icterus
- Anthrax ʹ pathology (Spleen), mild resp signs
8
Q
African horse sickness Prevention & Control?
A
Prevention & control
- ASH-free countries
- Avoiding introduction
- Restriction on equine (zebra!) importation from endemic countries
- Or permissions, min 30 days QT, serological & virological investigations
- Insecticide treatment against ectoparasites
- Dogs are potential carriers!
- Outbreak control
- Sanitary prophylaxis & supplementary treatment
- Restriction, slaughtering of affected animals, insect control
- Vaccinations in the safety zone ʹ with (live attenuated or) inactivated, type-specific
- vaccine 2x
- Long term surveillance, monitoring
- Endemic countries ʹ vaccine ʹ attenuated, polyvalent vaccines (produced in mouse brain or in cell
- cultures) ʹ protection for a few years
9
Q
Equine encephalosis?
A
Equine encephalosis
- (not notifiable)
- History, occurrence: - first detection in S. Africa, usually in the southern countries of Africa, but in Israel too (in 2009)
- Causative agent: orbivirus, culicoides vector
- Susceptibility: equines (gorse, donkey, zebra), elephant
- Pathogenesis: similar to AHS, BV damages
- Clinical signs, pathology
- 3-10 days incubation
- Frequently asymptomatic (donkey, mule)
- Fever for 1-5 days, restlessness, loss of appetite
- Oedema of the lips & eyelids, elevated pulse, CNS signs (oedema of brain)
- Abortion, typically in the first 5-6 months of pregnancy
- Inflammations of the mucosa & BVs
- Enteritis, liver dystrophy
- Recover in 1 ʹ 3 weeks
- Encephalosis = neuron damage but no signs of inflammation (unlike encephalitis which is due to
- inflammation)
- Diagnosis: virus isolation, RT-PCR, serology: ELISA, DDX: AHS!
- Prevention no vaccine! Epidemiological measures