Johnes Flashcards

1
Q

what is johnes disease?
What causes johnes?
what is it charaterised by?
what is the course of the disease?
when do animals get infected with johnes?

A
  • Incurable disease of cattle and other ruminants
  • Caused by Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP)
  • Characterised by wasting and diarrhoea
  • Granulomatous enteritis
    Slow/long course:
    infection –> carriage –> sublinical –> clinical (likehood of sheddign bacteria increases throughout this course)

80% of infections occure in frist month of life

Johne’s disease is also known as “paratuberculosis”

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2
Q

what human disease has johnes been accociated with?

A

Crohn’s disease in humans (MAP found in Crohns patients and healthy guts)
Can find MAP in pasteurized milk
Still (currently!) no convincing evidence of causality

Potential major reputational risk to dairy/meat industries

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3
Q

what are the sources of infection of johnes?

A
  • faeces from shedding cattle (slurry on pasture can keep pathogen for 6 months)
  • colostrum/milk from infected cattle
  • faeces from shedd ign goats/sheep (can infect cattle)
  • enviroment and fomite spread
  • wildlife resrvoirs
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4
Q

what are the clinical signs of Johnes?

A
  • Diarrhoea
    • Intermittent becoming chronic
  • Decreased production
    • i.e. milk yield
  • Weight loss/emaciation
  • +/- oedema (e.g. “bottle jaw”)
  • Disease normally develops at 2-6 years of age
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5
Q

what are the differentials for Weight loss and diarrhoea?

A
  • Liver fluke
    • peripheral oedema
    • very similar clinical apperance to johnes
  • Peritonitis
    • May find other signs (abdo pain, pyrexia), but not always
    • TRP (“hardware disease”) especially difficult to diagnose, but normally no D+
  • Displaced abomasum
    • Normally much more acute and with decreased yield more evident/severe, but can be intermittent/chronic
  • Abdominal neoplasia - rare
  • Chronic salmonellosis - rare
  • Parasitic gastroenteritis - rarely causes clinical signs in cattle
  • copper deficiency - normally milder group signs (eg infertility)
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6
Q

How is johnes diagnosed?
what are the pros and cons of the methods?
when are they used?

A
  • detect MAP in faeces (bacterial shedding)
    • PCR
    • directly demonstrates risk of transmission
    • MAP only intermittently shed in faeces, so sensitivity quite poor (20-65%) (better in clinical cases)
    • used as confirmatory test
    • pooled samples occationally used as herd-level diagnostic
  • Detect immume responce to MAP
    • Currently only detection of Ab In milk or blood
    • Generally higher Se (20-90%) than faecal testing
    • Sp slightly lower (~97 - 99%)
    • cheaper and quicker than faecal testing
    • Blood testing mostly for individual clinical cases and beef herd screening
    • Milk testing commonly used for dairy herd screening - Often uses lower “threshold” for positive
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7
Q

how is johnes managed?

A

individual basis: no treatment, prognosis hopeless, major risk to othe ranimals (esp calves)

Herd level:
Main goal is to minimize exposure of youngstock (< 1yr?) to potential sources of infection
- Slurry
- Colostrum, milk
- Fomites and pasture
- Other species

MAP can survive in the enviroment for over a year
Direct vertical transmission is also possible

Johnes management plan: (needed for many milk buyers)
- know your johnes risk
- know johnes disease status
- create a mangement plan

there are very few johnes naive farms, for these farms biosecurity is the main priority (buying in johnes free cattle is hard)

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