resp notes good 3 Flashcards

1
Q

hydrothorax
- what is this?
- major mechanisms?

A
  • Think of this as “edema of the pleural space”
  • Clear fluid (transudate) fills the pleural cavity and compresses the lungs
    <><><><>
    The major mechanisms of fluid transudation (and their common causes) are:
  • Increased venous pressure (right heart failure in all species, plus left heart failure in cats; excessive intravenous fluids; lung lobe torsion)
  • Reduced oncotic pressure: (hypoproteinemia)
  • Lymphatic obstruction (eg by a tumor, abscess, granuloma)
  • Increased vascular permeability: but, this causes an exudate rather than transudate; thus, the fluid is usually cloudy rather than clear & watery
  • Finally, if there is ascites, some of the peritoneal fluid can leak into the pleural cavity through tiny pores in the diaphragm
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2
Q

chylothorax
- what is this?
- major causes?

A
  • Milky opaque pleural fluid, rich in triglyceride and lymphocytes, arising from loss of lymph fluid into the pleural space
    <><><><>
  • The major causes are:
  • Heart failure. Increased central venous pressure prevents drainage of lymph from the thoracic duct into the vena cava.
  • Lung lobe torsion.
  • Many cases are idiopathic.
  • Uncommonly due to obstruction of the thoracic duct by tumours, or other masses, or rarely due to traumatic rupture of thoracic duct.
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3
Q

hemothorax
- causes

A
  • trauma (e.g. fractured ribs)
  • ruptured tumours (especially hemangiosarcoma)
  • idiopathic hemothorax in dogs
  • anticoagulant rodenticide toxicity
  • thymic hemorrhage syndrome in young dogs
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4
Q

pleuritis
- what is it? common causes?

A
  • Inflammation of the pleural cavity usually represents bacterial infection
    <><><><>
  • bacteria arrive via 3 routes:
  • External penetrating injury
  • Extension from bacterial pneumonia or rupture of a lung abscess (common in adult horses)
  • Hematogenous spread
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5
Q

pneumothorax - external vs internal

A
  • External pneumothorax: penetrating injury that allows air into the pleural space
  • Internal pneumothorax: rupture of a pulmonary bulla, or penetrating injury that punctures the lung
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6
Q

pleural neoplasms, how they cause clinical signs

A
  • lung tumours may invade the pleura and spread widely in the pleural space
    > metastatic tumour leaks fluid into the pleural cavity, which is the basis for clinical signs of respiratory distress
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7
Q

Pneumonic pasteurellosis
- what is this?
- who is affected?
- agents? where are they found?
- how does disease arise?

A
  • bronchopneumonia caused by any bacteria of the family Pasteurellaceae
  • affects cattle of various ages; dairy and veal calves, adult dairy cows, and “shipping fever” in beef calves
    <><>
    The major causes are bacteria of the family Pasteurellaceae:
  • Mannheimia haemolytica
  • Bibersterinia trehalosi
  • Histophilus somni
  • Pasteurella multocida
    <><><><>
  • These bacteria carried in the nasopharynx of normal calves
  • Disease is thought to require a predisposing cause, such as stress or viral infection
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8
Q

Histophilus somni causes what conditions?

A
  • bronchopneumonia
  • bacteremia and vasculitis that result in encephalitis (ITEME), polyarthritis, myocarditis, pleuritis, uveitis, and endometritis
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9
Q

Mannheimia haemolytica toxin, effects

A
  • leukotoxin
    > causes necrosis of ruminant macrophages and neutrophils
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10
Q

pneumonic pasteurellosis clinical signs

A
  • acute onset and mainly reflect the acute phase response: fever, depression, anorexia, lack of rumen fill, and holding back from the feed bunk
  • Other clinical signs result from local effects within the respiratory tract: coughing, mucopurulent nasal discharge, tachypnea, dyspnea.
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11
Q

shipping fever gross lesions

A
  • cranioventral bronchopenumonia
    > consolidation and reddening, as a result of fibrinopurulent exudate in the alveoli
    > palpably hard
    <><><><>
    Acute cases often have:
    1. Hemorrhagic purple-black lobules, giving a red/tan checkerboard pattern
    2. Loosely adherent fibrinous exudate on the pleural surface
    3. Interlobular septa distended by edema and fibrin
    4. Foci of necrosis visible on the cut surface
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12
Q

Chronic cases of shipping fever may develop what lesions?

A
  • tough fibrous adhesions on the pleura
  • abscessation of lung tissue
  • bronchiectasis
  • sequestrum formation.
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13
Q

Pneumonic pasteurellosis diagnosis

A
  • by far the most common cause of respiratory signs in cattle
  • cranioventral and mostly symmetrical gross lesions
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14
Q

Cranioventral bronchopneumonia with concurrent necrosis of tracheal epithelium suggests:

A

infectious bovine rhinotracheitis, with a fatal secondary bacterial pneumonia

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15
Q

Cranioventral bronchopneumonia in which the consolidated lung contains multifocal white circular crumbly foci of necrosis indicates:

A

Mycoplasma bovis

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16
Q

Consolidation affecting predominantly the caudal lung lobes could be caused by what? what should we do?

A
  • Dictyocaulus; open the caudal bronchi to carefully look for worms
17
Q

Pneumonic pasteurellosis sequelae

A
  • Animals may die acutely due to sepsis or “toxemia”, and often not due to respiratory failure
    <><><><>
    Chronic sequelae:
  • chronic bronchopneumonia
  • abscessation
  • sequestrum formation
  • bronchiectasis
  • pleural adhesions
    <><><><>
  • Relapses following apparently successful treatment often occur because these chronic lesions are a persistent source of infection that resists antibiotic treatment.
18
Q

Mycoplasma bovis
- causes what disease?
- when do we see this vs pneumonic pasteurellosis?
- non-lung diseases?

A
  • “chronic pneumonia and polyarthritis syndrome”
  • often in conjunction with other pathogens
  • many animals may be infected, but only few may develop disease > may cause minimal damage alone but predispose/perpetuate other infections
    <><><><>
  • appears in the second month after arrival in feedlots
    > vs pneumonic pasteurellosis in the first few weeks
    <><><><>
  • also spreads from the nasopharynx via the auditory tube into the middle ear to cause otitis media with droopy ears or head tilt
  • blood-borne spread to the joints to cause fibrinopurulent polyarthritis and tenosynovitis with chronic lameness
  • cow-to-cow transmission via the teat canal to cause mastitis
19
Q

Mycoplasma bovis characteristic lesions

A

caseonecrotic bronchopneumonia:
- cranioventral bronchopneumonia in which the consolidated areas contain multiple, circular, white, raised, friable foci of caseous necrosis

20
Q
  • Major reasons for aspiration pneumonia in cattle include?
  • lesion characteristics?
A
  • Force-fed milk replacer, liquid medicines, misplaced esophageal tube.
  • Cleft palate. Be sure to look for this in young animals with pneumonia.
  • Recumbency: milk fever or mastitis.
    <><><><>
  • cranioventral
  • localized or unilateral lesion
  • often foul-smelling and necrotic/friable due to anaerobic bacterial infection
21
Q

major risk factors for bacterial pneumonia in cattle

A

Viral infections, along with stressors