Sheep Abortion Flashcards

1
Q

What % of abortion within a flock is considered a problem?

A

> 2%

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2
Q

Give the most common causes of abortion

A
Chlamydophila abortus
Toxoplasma
Campylobacter
Salmonella
Listeria
Border disease
E. coli
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3
Q

What is the main source of infection of Chlamydophila abortus?

A

Aborting ewes
Discharges and products of abortion are heavily contaminated, viable for several days
Oral route

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4
Q

Give the different outcomes of exposure of Chlamydophila abortus (5)

A

1) >90 days pregnant: abort
2) <90 days pregnant: wont abort
3) Not pregnant: will harbour infection in reproductive tract and abort the following lambing
4) Ewe lambs born to infected ewes can become infected and abort in their first lambing
5) Once aborted, most ewes become immune and don’t abort again, but some will become carriers and shed at oestrus and lambing

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5
Q

Where does Chlamydophila abortus replicate within the ewe?

How does it cause abortion?

A

Trophoblastic epithelial cells
Causes severe placentitis with thickening and necrosis -> affects transport of nutrients and hormone production -> death or damage to lamb and inflammation of lamb’s organs

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6
Q

Give the clinical signs of Chlamydophila abortus

A

Abortion after 90 days of pregnancy (usually last month)
Death of lambs/birth of weak lambs/birth of one live and one dead lamb
Vaginal discharge for a couple of days
Sheep are rarely ill, occasionally have metritis (can be fatal)

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7
Q

How do you diagnose Chlamydophila abortus?

A

Abortion of well-preserved lambs in late pregnancy
Submit aborted placenta to APHA
Gross pathology: necrotising placentitis, intracotyledonary thickening
Modified Ziehl Neelson stain on placenta/vaginal discharge/foetus
Culture
PCR

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8
Q

How do you control an outbreak of Chlamydophila abortus?

A

Stop spread of infection: burn abortive material and bedding, isolate aborted ewes til discharges have cleared, clean pens

To reduce further abortions: treat all ewes yet to lamb (>90 days) with 20mg/kg long-acting oxytet, repeat in 2 weeks

Vaccinate next year with Enzovax or Cevax chlamydophila (give up to 4 weeks before mating)

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9
Q

What is the gestation period of a sheep?

A

147 days

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10
Q

How is Toxoplasma spread?

A

Cats= definitive hosts
Wildlife= reservoir
Cats shed millions of oocysts in faeces then become immune
Oocysts in environment are ingested by sheep

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11
Q

What are the 4 outcomes of Toxoplasma ingestion?

A

1) Not pregnant: develop immunity
2) Early pregnancy: foetal resorption, ewe appears barren
3) Mid pregnancy: foetal death/retardation/mummification
4) Late pregnancy: abortion/weak lambs/live immune lambs. Depends on lamb’s and placenta’s ability to deal with infection
Aborted ewes become immune

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12
Q

How do you diagnose Toxoplasma gondii?

A

Submit foetus, placenta, or paired blood sample of ewe for serology
Gross pathology of placenta: ‘frosted strawberries’ cotyledons
Histopath of foetus and placenta
IFAT of antigen in placenta
PCR
Serology

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13
Q

How would you describe a placenta affected by Toxoplasma gondii?

A

Frosted strawberry cotyledons

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14
Q

How would you describe a placenta affected by Chlamydophila abortus?

A

Thick and necrotic

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15
Q

How would you treat Salmonella abortus in sheep?

A

Long-acting oxytetracycline (20mg/kg)

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16
Q

Which Campylobacter species most commonly causes abortion in sheep?

A

C. fetus fetus

17
Q

When does Campylobacter cause abortion in sheep?

A

Last 6 weeks of pregnancy (1-4 weeks post-infection)

18
Q

How do you diagnose Campylobacter?

A

Smear and culture of placenta/foetal stomach and liver

19
Q

How do you treat Campylobacter?

A

Broad-spectrum ABs

No vaccine

20
Q

How is Border disease maintained in the flock?

A

PI animals

21
Q

Describe the outcomes seen with Border disease

A

<60 days pregnant: foetal death, resorption, mummification, abortion, stillbirth. Up to 50% survive and are normal

60-85 days: foetal death, abortion, stillbirth. Hairy shakers. Small weak lambs. PI lambs (can look normal)

> 85 days: normal but Ab positive lambs

22
Q

How is Schmallenberg spread?

A

Culicoides midges

23
Q

Give some clinical signs of Schmallenberg in cattle and sheep

A

Cattle: mild dz, diarrhoea, fever, milk drop, recover in 2-5 days

Sheep: no apparent clinical signs, increased return to service and barren ewe rate

24
Q

Give some birth defects seen with Schmallenberg

A
Can be born dead/alive/aborted
Bent limbs, fixed joints
Twisted neck/spine
Domed head
Short lower jaw
Live 'dummy'
Blindness
Wobbly
Inability to suck
Fitting
25
Q

Where does Listeria reside?

A

Soil

26
Q

When does abortion from Listeria occur?

A

1-2 weeks after feeding affected silage

27
Q

How do you treat Listeria?

A

Antibiotics for in-contacts (penicillin, oxytet)

Remove contaminated silage

28
Q

What is ‘tick-borne fever’?

How do you treat it?

A

Anaplasma phagocytophilia
Immunosuppressive, secondary infections
Abortion in naive animals
Tx: pyrethroid pour-on

29
Q

What is ‘Q fever’?

A

Coxiella burnettii

30
Q

How does Q fever affect pregnant and non-pregnant ewes?

A

Non-pregnant: clinically silent, then recrudesces when pregnant
Pregnant: abortion, stillbirth, poor lambs