Tuberculosis Flashcards
Structure
aerobic, non-spore-forming, non-motile, rod-shaped bacteria, gram-positive but lipids in cell wall make uptake of stain difficult
Most Important species
M. avium, M. bovis, and M. tuberculosis
Reservoirs
M. avium: domestic avian species, passerines, and waterfowl, marsupials
M. bovis: domestic cattle, antelope, camelids, equids, white-tailed deer, bidson, nonhuman primates, carnivores like European badger and ferrets, and marsupials
M. Tuberculosis: mostly humans, nonhuman primates, elephants, and psittacine birds
Transmission methods
Inhalation of droplets or ingestion of contaminated food or water (M. bovis)
Ingestion of contaminated food or water via fecal-oral, or of sick carcass (M. avium)
Inhalation of respiratory droplets (M. tuberculosis)
Pathogenesis
Phagocytosed by alveolar macrophages-> clear its or let them proliferate-> granuloma formation with dead and degenerate macrophages surrounded by epithelioid cells, granulocytes, lymphocytes, and multinucleated giant cells-> abscessed centers calcify-> obtain fibrous capsule
Ingestion-> primary in pharynx or mesenteric lymph nodes-> nodules in pleura, peritoneum, liver, kidney, spleen, skeleton, mammary glands, reproductive tract, and CNS
Vascular spread can be rapidly fatal, but otherwise chronic slow process
Clinical Signs
progressive emaciation, lethargy, weakness, anorexia, diarrhea, fluctuating fever, chronic, intermittent, moist cough, dyspnea, tachypnea, lymph node enlargement
Pathologic lesions
-granulomatous nodules throughout lungs, liver, spleen, and lymph nodes
-Liquefactive necrosis or caverns at sites of infection
Diagnosis
Postmortem evaluation, intradermal tuberculin test, culture, PCR
Treatment
Rarely done unless pet or endangered species, chronic treatment of several types of antibiotics usually 6-9 months
Management
-Reportable disease
-most often animal is culled
-limit exposure of domestic animals to wildlife
-proper hygienic measures (deep cleaning) areas of possible wildlife exposure
-national tuberculosis eradication program
-Evaluation of carcasses for TB