Buccal Cavity Infections I (6) Flashcards

1
Q

Wooden tongue is [hard tissues getting softer / soft tissues getting harder]

A

soft tissue getting harder

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2
Q

Lumpy Jaw is [hard tissues getting softer / soft tissues getting harder]

A

hard tissues getting softer

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3
Q

What is wooden tongue caused by?

A

actinobacillus lignieresii

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4
Q

What are the 3 actinobacillus species that cause major diseases in animals?

A

A. pleuropneumoniae

A. equuli

A. lignieresii

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5
Q

A. pleuropneumoniae causes ______

A

severe respiratory disease in swine that often results in high mortality

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6
Q

A. equuli causes ______

A

septicemia and pneumonia in foals as well as adult horses

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7
Q

A. lignieresii causes ______

A

“wooden tongue” in ruminants— abscesses in the tongue that hinder the ability of the animal to eat

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8
Q

How do you treat actinobacillus cases?

A

swine and horses: antibiotics

ruminants: sodium iodide

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9
Q

Which species does A. lignieresii cause disease primarily in?

A

mainly cattle

but other animals like sheep, horses, pigs, and dogs can get this

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10
Q

Actinobacillus is gram-[positive/negative] [bacilli/cocci/coccobacilli]

A

gram-negative

coccobacilli

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11
Q

What is the primary lesion with A. lignieresii infection in cattle associated with?

A

a very hard, diffusely swollen tongue

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12
Q

The diffusely swollen tongue of A. lignieresii leads to ______

A

excessive salivation

inability to prehend food normally

sometimes a visibly enlarged tongue that protrudes from the mouth

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13
Q

Wooden tongue has characteristic _______ embedded in the tongue

A

large granulomas

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14
Q

How does wooden tongue enter the body?

A

it is actually part of the normal mucosal flora of the upper GI tract

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15
Q

How does wooden tongue invade the body?

A

normally invades the skin through a wound or minor trauma caused by sticks, straw, or barley awns

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16
Q

How does A. lignieresii (wooden tongue) multiply/spread? It causes ______

A

spread via lymphatics to other tissues

causes localized infections

can also cause pyogranulomatous lesions in soft tissues associated with the head, neck, limbs, and occasionally the lungs, pleura, udder, and SQ tissue

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17
Q

What are the symptoms of wooden tongue?

A

inability to eat/drink

drooling

painful and swollen tongue

ulcers on tongue

rapid loss of condition

may occasionally die from starvation and thirst in the acute stages

18
Q

As wooden tongue becomes chronic, what happens?

A

fibrous tissue is deposited

the tongue becomes shrunken and immobile

19
Q

In wooden tongue, local lymph nodes may be enlarged, and abscesses may form and discharge creamy pus, which may contain _______

A

granules

20
Q

Confirmatory diagnosis of wooden tongue requires _____ and _____ of the lesion

A

culture

biopsy

21
Q

A. lignieresii is a [facultative/obligate] [aerobe/anaerobe]

A

facultative anaerobe

22
Q

What does A. lignieresii grow on?

A

MacConkey agar

blood agar plate

23
Q

For wooden tongue, gross pathology generally revealed a _________

A

firm, pale tongue containing multifocal nodules

24
Q

The nodules on wooden tongue are often filled with what?

A

thick, yellow-white pus

25
Q

In wooden tongue, pus from the abscesses crushed between two glass slides may show what?

A

club-like spicules of calcium phosphate

26
Q

In wooden tongue, histologically, the primary lesion is a ________

A

granulomatous abscess

27
Q

T/F: There are reliable serologic tests available for actinobacillosis, and the hematologic and clinical chemistry findings are generally abnormal

A

FALSE - not reliable and findings are normal

28
Q

What are these? Which bacteria?

A

club colonies

actinobacillosis

29
Q

What is treatment for actinobacillosis ligneriesii?

A

sodium iodine - treatment of choice

systemic antibacterial agents

30
Q

How do you prevent wooden tongue?

A

avoiding coarse, stemmy feedstuffs and pastures full of hard, penetrating plant awns (foxtails or thistles)

31
Q

What is lumpy jaw caused by? (etiologic agent)

A

actinomycosis bovis

32
Q

What is lumpy jaw?

A

a localized, chronic, progressive, granulomatous abscess that most frequently involves the mandible, maxillae, or other bony tissues in the head

33
Q

A. bovis has been isolated from nodular abscesses in the ____ of cattle

A

lungs

34
Q

Which disease is this?

A

actinomycosis bovis

  • typical enlargement of the mandible
  • mandibular lesion of suppurative and proliferative osteomyelitis
35
Q

What is the entry of A. bovis?

A

A. bovis is part of the normal oral flora of ruminants

36
Q

How does A. bovis invade the body?

A

introduced to underlying soft tissue via penetrating wounds of the oral mucosa from wire or coarse hay or sticks

37
Q

How does lumpy jaw spread?

A

primary lesion appears as a slow-growing, firm mass that is attached to, or part of the mandible

38
Q

What does Actinomycosis bovis require to be confirmed by a culture?

A

requires anaerobic conditions

39
Q

A. bovis is gram-[positive/negative]

A

gram-negative

has club-shaped rods and filaments (sulfur granules)

40
Q

How do you treat lumpy jaw?

A

sodium iodide - treatment of choice

current administration of antimicrobials, etc

41
Q

How do you prevent lumpy jaw?

A

avoid corse, stemmy feeds or feeds with plants awns that might damage the mucosal epithelium

42
Q

Osteomyelitis is common is [actinobacillus lignieresii / actinomyces bovis]

A

actinomyces bovis