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Foreign Animal Diseases in Poultry Angie Dement Extension Associate for Veterinary Medicine Texas AgriLife Extension Service The Texas A&M System http://aevm.tamu.edu. Improving Lives. Improving Texas. “Avian Flu” “Bird Flu”. Viral disease Two classifications or forms
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Foreign Animal Diseases in Poultry Angie Dement Extension Associate for Veterinary Medicine Texas AgriLife Extension Service The Texas A&M System http://aevm.tamu.edu Improving Lives. Improving Texas.
“Avian Flu” “Bird Flu” Viral disease Two classificationsor forms • Low-pathogenic avian influenza (LPAI) • risk to poultry industry • reportable • endemic disease • most common class • High-pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) • serious damage to poultry industry • reportable • epidemic disease Disease severity and symptoms determine class
Zoonotic disease (Rare) HPAI class Mutates – potentially infectious to people limited bird to people via bird feces unusual people to people not a pandemic (global) human flu 115 human deaths (1/04-5/06) – SE Asia Human Flu: 36,000 human deaths/yr – US
Vaccines under development Antiviral drugs available Accelerated monitoring and surveillance Advanced diagnostic technologies Advanced information delivery technologies
Affects many bird species: • Chickens • Turkeys • Pheasants • Quail • Geese • Ducks • Guinea fowl
Causative Agent Caused by influenza strain A virus • Over 144 subtypes of type HN • by combinations of H and N • H = Hemaglutinin • N = Neuraminidase • examples = H1N2, H2N2, H7N2
Types H5 and H7 mutates from LPAI to HPAI FAD (not in US) Subtype H5N1 (epidemics) HPAI bird to bird, rarely to people Asia Subtype H7N7 (epidemics) HPAI bird to bird, rarely to people The Netherlands Various Subtypes of HN (endemics) LPAI bird to bird, not to people US
Virus denatured by: • Heat • Proper cooking • Drying • Most disinfectants/detergents
Transmission Natural reservoir: • Migratory waterfowl • Virus in intestines • Virus shed in feces
“One gram of contaminated manure can contain enough virus to infect1 million birds.”
Bird - bird direct contact • Feces • fecal to oral transmission most common • Saliva • Nasal excretions
Bird – environment - bird indirect contact: • Mechanical contamination • Environmental transmission • Manure • Equipment • Vehicles • Egg flats • Crates • People articles
Diagnosis LPAI • No symptoms • Low-risk virus HPAI • Symptoms • Sudden death before symptoms • High-risk virus • virulent • highly infectious • respiratory disease
Symptoms: Sudden death Lack energy/appetite Decreased egg production Egg deformities Swellings Red and purple skin Nasal discharge Coughing/sneezing Incoordination Diarrhea
BIOSECURITY! Lock houses Special clothing Don’t visit other houses Control visitors Cleanliness Submit sick birds Dispose of dead birds Restricted area signs No live-bird market birds Sanitary/disinfectant protocols Prevention
Regulation and Eradication • Texas FEAD Response Plan • identify positive animals and destroy • reduce amount of time to get back test results • track origin of suspect animals • LPAI • quarantine • may destroy birds (depopulation) with evidence of mutation • disinfect premises • HPAI • quarantine • destroy birds (depopulation) • disinfect premises
Previously known as Velogenic Viscerotropic Newcastle Disease (VVND) Viral disease Affects all bird species Highly contagious Most infectious poultry disease Reportable Zoonotic Exotic Newcastle Disease
Causative Agent • Virus • Serotype group Avian paramyxovirus type 1 (APMV-1) • Highly resilient
Transmission • Virus excreted by • Feces • Nose • Mouth • Eyes • Virus enters by • Ingestion • Inhalation
Spread by: • Direct contact • Mechanical means • Human contamination • Incubation periodis 2 to15 days • Highly contagious in all bird species • Some birds die without symptoms
Diagnosis • Clinical signs include: • Respiratory • Digestive • Nervous • Egg production • Swelling • Death – if flocks are not vaccinated, death rate will be 100% if animals become infected
Prevention • Maintain biosecurity measures • No pet birds • Diseased birds to diagnostic lab • Know health status of birds before bringing them to farm
Regulation and Eradication • Texas FEAD Emergency Response Plan • identify positive animals and destroy • reduce amount of time to get back test results • track origin of suspect animals
#1 response procedure is to destroy an infected flock and impose a strict quarantine. • Clean entire premises • Wait 30 days before repopulating • Control insect/rodent population
Deactivate virus by: • Sun exposure (UV rays) • Rapid dehydration The virus can survive for weeks in warm, humid environments and indefinitely on frozen material.
Poultry Biosecurity • Keep Your Distance • Keep It Clean • Don’t Haul Disease Home • Don’t Borrow Disease From Your Neighbor • Know the Warning Signs of Infectious Bird Diseases • Report Sick Birds