Lab 3.5 - Cases Flashcards

1
Q

what disease would you be suspicious of if you saw enlarged sciatic nerves and nodules in the liver during a PM?

A

mareks disease

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2
Q

what is another name for mareks disease

A

Gallid herpesvirus 2

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3
Q

what type of samples would you submit for PCR to confirm mareks disease?

A

1 mL blood (live animals); tissues, feather tip (postmortem)

Target: Gallid herpesvirus 2 nucleic acid (DNA virus)

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4
Q

what disease do you suspect with splayed legs in chickens?

A

mareks disease

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5
Q

mareks disease virus life cycle

A

-MDV invades lung air space and infects epithelial cells -> MDV infects cells and spreads to the feather follicle to replicate -> birds shed MDV particles in skin dander -> birds inhale MDV particles from dust in the environment

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6
Q

vaccination for mareks disease

A

-In OVO! We can vaccinate 18-day-old embryos!
-The chick has the best possible start when it hatches and better disease resistance from day one
-Manual subcutaneous vaccination is susceptible to human errors, while in ovo vaccination systems deliver the right dose in the right location

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7
Q

what are some reasons an animal may get a disease even though they are vaccinated against it? (4)

A

-Particularly virulent strain of virus
-Vaccine failure? (wrong administration route, not administered in correct quantity, poor preservation (e.g. vaccine got too hot/cold/old)
-Non-responder to the vaccine / immune status?
-Vaccine does not prevent infection, but prevents disease!

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8
Q

what viruses can cause erosive/ulcerative mouth lesions? (6)

A

-Bovine viral diarrhea virus (Flavivirus)
-Foot and mouth disease (Picornavirus)
-Infectious bovine rhinotracheitis (Alphaherpesvirus)
-Malignant catarrhal fever (Gammaherpesvirus)
-Rinderpest (Paramyxovirus)
-Vesicular stomatitis (Rhabdovirus)

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9
Q

what virus are you suspicious of if you see the following clinical signs?
-Progressing severe watery bloody diarrhea in young animals
-Oral mucosal ulceration
-Poor-doing calves (scruffiness, poor coordination, small)
-Distal limb erosions

A

*Clinical presentation could fit with mucosal disease OR severe, acute BVDV

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10
Q

what do you need to submit to determine BVDV?

A

To detect viral antigen:
-RT-PCR (both type 1 and type 2)
-Immunohistochemistry
-Virus isolation (~20 days)

Samples:
-Ileum with Peyer’s patch, spleen, mesenteric lymph node, esophagus

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11
Q

what do you need to consider when doing virus neutralization for BVDV?

A
  • Results in 1 to 3 weeks
  • Animals that have been vaccinated for BVDV will show a positive result
  • Persistently infected animal: low or no antibodies
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12
Q

how do you differentiate between persistent infection and acute infection

A

A +ve PCR resut on a single sample cant distinguish between an acutely infected animal and a PI animal. re-test positive animal at least 3 weeks after first testing. PI animals will be virus positive a second time. acutely infected animals that have recovered will be negative

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13
Q

how can you test a herd for BVDV and tell positive/negative

A

-If the test is negative: you know every animal who contributed to the bulk tank is negative
-If the test is positive: milk should be retested in 3 weeks to rule out acute
infection
-If the bulk milk sample is positive a second time: you need to evaluate
animals individually

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14
Q

how do you control for BVDV

A

-Identification and elimination of persistently infected animals in a herd = also need to test any replacement animals

-vaccination = Ideally you would want to choose a vaccine that works against both BVDV 1 and 2

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