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Swine diseases

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Swine diseases Parvovirus Leptospirosis: gram - spirochete PRRS: Arterivirus Brucellosis: gram negative 100% prevalence: endemic Important signs large numbers of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Swine diseases


1
  • Swine diseases

2
Coccidiosis
  • confinement rearing and continuous farrowing
  • Isospora suis (most common)
  • Eimeria
  • carrier sows source of oocyts
  • piglets 5 days old to weaning

3
Coccidiosis
  • Clinical signs
  • yellow to clear, pasty to watery diarrhea (7-10
    days)
  • Dehydration
  • rough hair coat
  • failure to gain weight
  • no blood
  • acidic feces (in contrast
  • to E. coli)
  • Dehydration
  • Morbidity is high
  • but mortality is
  • variable, often moderate

4
Coccidiosis cont...
  • Diagnosis
  • Diarrheas in pigs lt7days old are not Isospora!
  • Necropsy - fibrinonecrotic enteritis
  • Histopathology - oocysts, merozoites
  • Fecal flotation can be falsely negative
  • Treatment
  • Adding coccidiostats to feed is ILLEGAL
  • amprolium to piglets
  • Control - disinfection of farrowing area
  • Strong bleach or ammonium compounds
  • Between farrowings, steam cleaning
  • Installation of perforated metal or plastic
    flooring in the crates will be beneficial in the
    control of coccidiosis

5
Coccidiosis
lower jejunum and ileum.
6
Rota virus
  • Reovirus
  • Almost all pigs are infected species specific
  • Diarrhea in nursing and postweaned pigs
  • Diarrhea appears, usually white to yellow in
    color
  • moderate dehydration
  • Vomiting occurs but is not a major clinical sign
  • Morbidity is variable but mortality usually is
    low or none when good housing and husbandry is
    present.

7
Rota virus
  • Diagnosis - difficult
  • Necropsy-thin walled small
  • intestine
  • Histopathology
  • Flourescent antibody test
  • Electron microscopy

8
Rota virus cont...
  • Treatment
  • Dextrose and fluids
  • Antimicrobials for concurrent infections
  • E. coli
  • Isospora
  • Control
  • Rotaviruses are very stable in the environment
    formaldehyde and chlorine-based disinfectants
    including chlorox
  • Wean pigs on good nutritional diet
  • MLV vaccine at 7 and 21 days (in water) and also
    for dams

9
Dont forget Salmonella
  • Salmonella typhimurium
  • Salmonella cholerasuis
  • Fibrinonecrotic enteritis or colitis at necropsy
  • Rectal strictures
  • Culture of organism

10
Swine dysentery
  • Brachyspira hyodysenteriae Gram-negative,
    anaerobic spirochete
  • Brachyspira (Serpulina) pilosicoli (similar but
    less severe c.s.)
  • Grower / finishers (not in lt 3 weeks)
  • Mortality can be up to 30
  • lagoon water two months, moist feces two
    months, soil 18 days
  • Transmission fecal-oral and fomites, rats, birds

11
Swine dysentery
  • Clinical signs
  • diarrhea with gray to yellow, mucoid feces
  • watery, bloody, mucoid
  • most recover in 2 weeks but 50 may die
  • Dehydrated sunken eyes, marked weakness, hollow
    flanks and weight loss
  • Large intestine/cecum

SD is a severe disease affecting the colon (large
intestine) of pigs causing diarrhoea, frequently
mixed with mucus and blood, which can lead to
death.
12
Swine dysentery
13
Swine dysentery cont...
  • Diagnosis
  • Necropsy - mucohemorrhagic colitis
  • histopathology
  • Spiral shaped organism on
  • dark field microscopy
  • Culture is definitive
  • Treatment
  • carbadox, lincomycin (water) and tiamulin
  • Control
  • Quarantine 30 60 days
  • medicated water, depopulation, close herd
  • vaccine only reduces clinical signs

14
Proliferative enteropathy
  • Lawsonia intracellulare
  • Bent, rod-shaped, Gram-negative bacteria
  • proliferative illeitis, hemorrhagic bowel
    syndrome
  • Large intestine hyperplasia of crypt enterocytes
    with inflammation and sometimes ulceration or
    hemorrhage
  • hamsters, ferrets, guinea pigs, foxes, horses,
    lambs, rabbits, rats, dogs, white-tailed deer,
    emus

15
Proliferative enteropathy
  • Weanlings and older
  • Clinical signs
  • Acute diarrhea with brownish to black unclotted
    blood
  • pallor, weakness, and rapid death are common
  • Subacute to chronic cases occur more frequently
    in the grower stages
  • sporadic diarrhea, wasting, and variation in
    growth rate
  • lesions often include necrotic enteritis and can
    be easily confused with salmonellosis.
  • anemia (think gastric ulcer first)
  • Morbidity and mortality with either presentation
    is variable

16
Proliferative enteropathy cont...
  • Diagnosis
  • Necropsy - garden hose ilium and colon
  • can be hemorrhagic or fibrinonecrotic
  • Histopathology - intracellular, silver positive
  • DNA probes
  • Treatment and control
  • No specific treatment
  • Reduce stress
  • Medicate feed - tylosin, tetracyclines,
    lincomycin, tiamulin, and carbadox
  • Live vaccine in water

17
Proliferative illeitis
18
Whipworms
  • Trichuris suis
  • pasture
  • 2-6 months of age
  • Large intestine

19
Whipworms
  • Clinical signs
  • Anorexia
  • mucoid or mucohemorrhagic diarrhea
  • dehydration, and possibly death of
  • severely affected animals
  • anemia (2 DDX?)
  • Diagnosis - fecal float, fibrinnecrotic colitis
  • Control dichlorvos, levamisole and fenbendazole

20
Whipworms
21
Agent Common name Products Products Products Products Products Products
Agent Common name Piperazine Pyrantel Avermectins Levamisole Dichlorvos Fenbendazole
Stephanurus dentatus Kidneyworm - - -
Haematopinus suis Lice - - - -
Metastrongylus spp. Lungworm - - -
Sarcoptes scabiei Mange mite - - - - -
Oesophagostomum spp. Nodular worm
Ascaris suum Roundworm
Macracanthorhynchus hirudinaceus Thorny-headed worm - - - - - -
Stronglyloides ransomi Threadworm - - - -
Trichuris suis Whipworm - - -
22
Dont forget Salmonella!
  • Salmonella typhimurium
  • Salmonella cholersuis
  • associated with rectal strictures?
  • Can be large intestine
  • Fibrinonecrotic colitis
  • Rectal strictures
  • Culture

23
Parasites of pigs
  • Trichuris suis - colon
  • Ascaris suum - small intestine, milk spots
  • Stephanurus edentatus - kidney
  • Macrocanthorynchus hirudinaceous -small intestine

24
Neurological diseases
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Streptococcus suis Gram-positive
  • Salt poisoning
  • Edema disease

25
Hypoglycemia
  • Newborn piglets
  • Blood glucose lt50mg/dL may develop signs
  • Clinical signs
  • convulsions
  • shivering
  • hypothermia
  • gait abnormalities

26
Hypoglycemia cont...
  • Diagnosis
  • Blood glucose
  • Empty stomach
  • Treatment
  • 20ml/kg 5 dextrose, warm fluids
  • Control
  • make sure the milk is flowing

27
Salt poisoning
  • Usually due to water deprivation rather than too
    much Na
  • Causes hyperosmalarity of CNS resulting in
    swelling and edema
  • Clinical signs
  • thirst, constipation
  • depression, blindness, convulsions

28
Salt poisoning cont...
  • Diagnosis
  • History
  • Clinical pathology-eosinopenia, hypernatremia
  • Histopathology - eosinophilic meningitis
  • Treatment
  • None
  • Control
  • provide free access to water
  • reduce salt in diet

29
Musculoskeletal diseases
  • Arthritis
  • S. suis, Erysipelothrix, A. pyogenes
  • Mycoplasma hyosynoviae
  • Myodegenerative disease
  • Malignant hyperthermia (PSE)
  • White muscle disease

30
Suppurative arthritis
  • Streptococcus suis gram positive
  • Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae gram positive rod
  • Actinomyces pyogenes
  • May see loss of cartilage
  • Due to fighting, surgical contamination
  • Distended joints, abscesses
  • Penicillin - treatment often no good

31
Suppurative arthritis
32
Mycoplasmal arthritis
  • Mycoplasma hyosynoviae
  • 4-12 weeks of age
  • acute or chronic lameness
  • non-suppurative arthritis/synovitis
  • edema of synovial tissue
  • Lincomysin to treat

33
Mycoplasmal arthritis
34
Reproductive disease
  • Parvovirus
  • Leptospirosis gram - spirochete
  • PRRS Arterivirus
  • Brucellosis gram negative

35
Porcine parvovirus
  • 100 prevalence endemic
  • Important signs
  • large numbers of mummified fetuses
  • increase in the number of returns to estrus
  • small litters
  • failures to farrow, decreased farrowing rate,
  • rarely abortion
  • Transmission secretions, oro-nasal,
    transplacental

Poor conception rates, reabsorbed litters,
mummies and small litters
36
Porcine parvovirus
  • Transient leukopenia
  • Signs depend on time of infection
  • lt30days - embryo resorbed
  • 30-70days - mummy
  • gt70days - dead or weak, survive normally
  • no other signs of illness
  • SMEDI - stillbirth, mummy, embryonic death,
    infertility
  • Diagnosis - detection of virus in mummy by
    immunofluorescence or by rising titer

37
Parvo - SMEDI
38
Porcine parvovirus cont...
  • Control
  • Resistant to environmental degradation and many
    disinfectants
  • Natural infection of gilts before breeding
  • Commingle gilts with sows
  • Grind up mummies and feed to gilts
  • Vaccination!
  • Killed vaccine breeding animals
  • may still get some losses

39
Leptospirosis
  • Leptospirosis
  • Leptospira interrogans (serovars pomona,
    icterohaemorrhagiae, canicola, and bratislava)
  • Leptospira borgpetersenii (serovars sejroe and
    tarassovi)
  • Leptospira kirschneri (serovar grippotyphosa)
  • serovar L. hardjo bovines and has been reported
    to infect pigs in close proximity
  • Zoonosis

40
Leptospirosis
  • CS
  • Adult mild fever and inappetence for a few days,
    last trimester abortion, stillbirths, weak
    litters,
  • Piglets fever, anorexia, hemolytic anemia,
    hemoglobinuria, icterus, convulsions in
    occasional pigs and a failure to grow and gain
    weight and sudden mortality in piglets

Placentitis
41
Leptospirosis
  • Diagnosis
  • Culture difficult
  • Dark field microscopy of fetal fluids, urine
  • Serology (lt1800)
  • Necropsy interstitial nephritis or generalized
    kidney scarring which may only be noticed at
    slaughter as white-spotted kidneys

42
Leptospirosis cont...
  • Treatment
  • Chlortetracycline in feed/ oxytetracycline,
    tylosin, and erythromycin
  • Control
  • Vaccination
  • Gilts twice before first breeding
  • Sows before every breeding
  • Rodent control

43
PRRS
  • Porcine reproductive/respiratory syndrome
  • Arterivirus
  • Premature farrowing
  • Small weak piglets or stillborns
  • increased numbers of mummies
  • Delayed or abnormal estrus
  • Serology to diagnose
  • Vaccination for prevention

Abortions, mummies and weak pigs
44
Brucellosis
  • Brucella suis gram negative
  • Zoonotic
  • Ist agent to be weaponized by US 1950
  • Rare in US
  • A cooperative, 3-stage, State-Federal-Industry
    eradication program was initiated with a goal of
    eradication of brucellosis.
  • Goal is nearly accomplished in domestic herds,
    but feral swine remain a reservoir in the US.

45
Brucellosis
  • Transmission direct contact
  • ingesting aborted fetuses, fetal membranes or
    fluids discharged at the time of abortion
  • Clinical signs
  • abortion at any time in gestation
  • infertility - many sows coming back into heat
    (abortions in first trimester)
  • infected sows recover and deliver normally
  • Lesions
  • mild endometritis
  • arthritis
  • orchitis

46
Brucellosis
Lesions in the uterus of a pig caused by B. suis
47
Brucellosis cont...
  • Diagnosis
  • The buffered, acidified plate antigen (BAPA) test
    and the standard card test (SCT) have been used
    extensively as presumptive test
  • confirmation, either the standard tube test (STT)
    or the particle concentration fluorescence
    immunoassay (PCFIA)
  • Culture most accurate
  • Treatment and control
  • Test and slaughter (depopulate 2-3 months)

48
Abortions/stillbirths
  • Parvo virus
  • PRRS
  • Pseudorabies
  • Lepto

49
References
  • http//www.aphis.usda.gov/animal_health/animal_dis
    _spec/swine/
  • http//www.ncsu.edu/project/swine_extension/ncpork
    conf/2002/roberts.htm
  • http//www.vetmed.wisc.edu/pbs/zoonoses/Erysipelas
    /erysipelasindex.html
  • http//vetmed.iastate.edu/vdpam/new-vdpam-employee
    s/food-supply-veterinary-medicine/swine/swine-dise
    ases/haemophilus-parasuis-
  • http//vetpath.wordpress.com/category/necropsy-cas
    es/

50
References
  • http//www.fmv.utl.pt/atlas/figado/pages_us/figad0
    15_ing.htm
  • http//www.cfsph.iastate.edu/DiseaseInfo/disease.p
    hp?nameinfluenzalangen
  • http//microgen.ouhsc.edu/a_pleuro/a_pleuro_home.h
    tm
  • http//www.merckvetmanual.com/mvm/index.jsp?cfile
    htm/bc/51205.htmwordleptospirosis2Cin2Cpigs
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