Johnes Flashcards
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?
- 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”
what human disease has johnes been accociated with?
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
what are the sources of infection of johnes?
- 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
what are the clinical signs of Johnes?
- 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
what are the differentials for Weight loss and diarrhoea?
-
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)
How is johnes diagnosed?
what are the pros and cons of the methods?
when are they used?
- 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
how is johnes managed?
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)