Ruminant and Swine Dermatology Flashcards
Dermatophilosis
- pathogenesis
- type of organism
- clinical signs
- Moist, dirty environments (sanitation issue)
- Zoonotic
- Gram (+), filamentous Cocci
- Clinical signs: paint brush lesions, moist gray/pink surface under crusts
- Extremities, muzzle and dorsum
It is January in Virginia and a local farmer reports that several calves on his lot have circular areas of hair loss on their head and neck. Upon physical examination, you also scaling and crusting. The farmer also states that he has noticed a similar lesion on his arm. You diagnose the calves with Dermatophytosis.
- What is the inciting cause?
- How did the calves/farmer contract this condition?
- How will you treat and prevent the condition from recurring?
Inciting Cause
- Fungus: trichophyton verrucosum (many others)
Pathogenesis
- Picked up in environment; spores live in wood/on equipment; condition is contagious / zoonotic!
- Confinemnet housing, humid conditions, lack of sun
Treatment and Prevention
- remove crusts; apply antifungal creams
- Iodine baths/ointment; is usually self-limiting
- limit contact with fomites; proper housing; reduce moisure in environment; control scratching (lice tx)
What is “Club Lamb Fungus”
Show lambs have short hair (State Trooper / Corp Cadet haircut):
- bathed (3x/day for a week) ridding of all the beneficial skin oils -> skin is “ripe” for an infection -> children are touching these lambs at shows and spread ringworm (zoonotic fungus) to the susceptible lambs
A 15-month-old bull presents for a firm, protruding mass that has a horny dry surface. You diagnose Papillomatosis (wart).
- Inciting cause?
- Pathogenesis?
- Tx? Prevention?
- Papillomavirus - proliferative lesions!
- Pathogenesis = skin trauma; is contagious! Often seen with tattooing and ear tagging
- Tx = cut them off; crush them (release T-Cells & accelerates immune response)
- Prevention = vaccine (autogenous, commercial)
A herd of 5-month-old lambs present for proliferative scabby lesions at mucocutaneous junctions- mouth, eyes and nose.
- What is the inciting cause / diagnosis?
- How will you treat and prevent this condition?
Parapoxvirus: Contagious ecthyma, orf, sore mouth
- kids and lambs (< 6 months)
- hardy virus: persists in environment (e.g., fairgrounds). Once a farm is infected, it is always infected!
- Zoonotic
- Tx = ABX and analgesics
- Prevention = live-virus vaccine
What are the species of biting and sucking lice in food animals?
Biting: Bovicola sp.
Sucking: Haematopinus sp. or Linognathus sp.
Time frame of lice in cattle vs. goats/sheep/swine?
How are lice treated in cattle?
Treat in fall and @ first time in the year with injectable ivermectins (sucking lice) or pyrethroids (larvae)
How are lice treated in cattle?
winter and spring
Treat in fall and @ first time in the year with injectable ivermectins (sucking lice) or pyrethroids (larvae)
Where are the lesiosn of chorioptic mange in cattle versus sheep/goats?
Treatment of chorioptic mange
topical insecticides; lime sulfur baths; dexamethosone and ceftiofur for hypersensitivitity rxn
Blow Fly Strike: what are they attracted to / pathogenesis
Livestock
“poopy butt”, necrotic tissue, soaked fleece -> eggs hatch within hours of being laid -> the larvae (screwworms) develop in host tissues -> can cause death in small ruminants via systemic infection (staph bacteria)
What fly causes cattle spinal cord lesions?
Hypoderma bovis = warbles/ bots
Pathogenesis, clinical signs and treatment for Hypoderma?
Grubicide before Nov15
Where do lesions manifest in Squamous Cell Carcinoma? (cattle v. sheep v. goats)
White/non-pigmented cattle, sheep, goats
- Cattle: ocular lesions
- Sheep: crusty, weeping, thickened ears
- Goats: vulva, anus, udder, base of tail
More often = goats (hold tail up; UV-induced // more light to these regions)