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Poultry Pathology – Part III. H. L. Shivaprasad CAHFS – Tulare University of California, Davis. Avian Toxicosis. Mycotoxins Heavy metals Ionophores Gases; PTFE, Ammonia, CO Selenium, salt, calcium Vitamins Antibiotics Rodenticides Plants Others. Ergot toxicity – toes, quail.
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Poultry Pathology – Part III H. L. Shivaprasad CAHFS – Tulare University of California, Davis
Avian Toxicosis • Mycotoxins • Heavy metals • Ionophores • Gases; PTFE, Ammonia, CO • Selenium, salt, calcium • Vitamins • Antibiotics • Rodenticides • Plants • Others
Lead toxicity, duck - lead pellets in gizzard Lead toxicity (gizzard), duck- myocardial degeneration
Lead inclusions – kidney, psittacine. Histopathology ( H & E) and TEM
Ionophore toxicity (monensin) - turkeys Monensin toxicity – Clinical signs, turkeys. Skeletal muscle degeneration.
Ammonia toxicity – chicken Corneal erosion/ulceration
Diphacinone (green) and zinc phosphide (grey) toxicity – pea fowl. Liver – hemorrhage. Crop contents
Cotton defoliant toxicity Trachea - turkeys
Avian Metabolic Diseases • Hemochromatosis • Amyloidosis • Gout (visceral and articular) • Hepatic Lipidosis • Hemorrhagic fatty liver syndrome (chickens) • Atherosclerosis • Diabetes mellitus
Avian Metabolic Diseases • Mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIB (emu) • Aortic rupture • Coronary artery aneurysm (turkeys) • Round heart disease (turkeys) • Ascites syndrome (chickens) • Tibial dyschondroplasia • Deep pectoral myopathy
Amyloidosis • a condition where in amorphous eosinophilic substance, amyloid is deposited, primarily extracellularly • two types of amyloid; primary and secondary • primary: associated with plasma cell neoplasia secondary: associated with chronic infections others: based on origin of amyloid, chemical composition (17 proteins), localized, endocrine (insulin), aging(senile), etc.
Amyloidosis, ‘water belly’ in ducks Hepatic amyloidosis - ducks
Amyloid arthropathy – Brown Leghorn chicken. Mycoplasma synoviae Amyloid arthropathy – Brown Leghorn chicken.Enterococcus faecalis
Amyloid arthropathy – Brown Leghorn chicken.Congo Red and green birefringence
GOUT (urate deposit) • gout is a metabolic condition where abnormal accumulation of white chalky or white semi-fluid-like urates in soft tissues of various organs in the body • uric acid is the endproduct of protein and purine metabolism (uricotelic) in birds, where as in mammals urea is the endproduct (ureotelic) • birds lack the enzyme, carbamylphosphate synthetase to dispose of ammonia and the enzyme uricase to decarboxylate uric acid to allontoin
Gout • Gout occurs as two distinct syndromes; visceral and articular urate deposits (gout) • these two syndromes differ in age of onset, frequency, sex predilection, gross and microscopic lesions, pathogenesis and causes • great deal of confusion exists between the two syndromes because urate deposition takes place in joints in visceral gout also • term “visceral gout” should be replaced with the term “visceral urate deposits”
Differences between Visceral and Articular urate deposits (Gout)
Visceral gout – joints, chicken Visceral urate deposits – joints and viscera, 5 day-old chick
Visceral urate – joint, chicken Visceral urate deposits – kidneys
Hemorrhagic Fatty Liver Syndrome/Hepatic Lipidosis • Hemorrhagic Fatty Liver Syndrome (HFLS): is a disease of obese chicken layers in cages characterized by extremely fatty liver, drop in egg production and increased mortality due to ruptured liver • Obesity with fatty livers is common in pet birds; amazons, budgerigars, rose-breasted cockatoos and others
Mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) Type IIIB in Emus • MPS type IIIB, also called sanfilippo B syndrome • first description in any animal • deficiency of N-acetyl-a-D-glucosaminidase • probably inherited as a autosomal recessive trait • sudden death, neurological signs in birds between 3 weeks and 6 months of age • ruptured liver or subcutaneous hemorrhage • accumulation of membrane bound substance in neurons of nervous tissue and visceral organs
MPS IIIB – Emu. Clinical signs MPS IIIB – emu brain, swollen neurons
Metabolic diseases – cont. • Aortic rupture • most common in male turkeys, also in ostrich, emu • longitudinal slit/tear in aorta at the origin of coeliac • medial degeneration and loss of elastic fibers, plaque • genetics, hypertension, low copper, vasa vasorum defect ? • Coronary artery rupture • 15 -16 weeks-old male turkeys, 1.5-3.5% mortality • hemopericardium, hemorrhage at base of heart, medial degeneration of coronary artery, rupture • genetics, hypertension, low copper, increased body weights?
Aortic Rupture, turkey – hemorrhage (left), normal aorta (middle), rupture of coeliac artery (right)
Aortic rupture – ostrich and emu Histopathology - aorta
Coronary artery aneurysm – Turkeys Hemopericardium, hemorrhage, heart
Metabolic diseases – cont. • Round heart disease of turkeys: • also called spontaneous cardiomyopathy • common condition in young commercial turkeys • dilated ventricles, chronic passive congestion of liver • cause is not known, genetics ? • Ascites syndrome of chickens: • common condition in broiler chickens • right heart hypertrophy, dilation, passive congestion of liver and ascites • rapid growth coupled with insufficient pulmonary capillary capacity aggravates pulmonary hypertension leading to right heart failure