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DISEASES, by CALLIE PARR Materials produced for classroom use in conjunction with permission from the University of Illi

Diseases Submitted by Callie Parr and used in cooperation with the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

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DISEASES, by CALLIE PARR Materials produced for classroom use in conjunction with permission from the University of Illi

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  1. Diseases Submitted by Callie Parr and used in cooperation with the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The materials that appear in this document may be freely reproduced for educational/training activities. There is no requirement to obtain special permission for such uses. We do, however, ask that the following statement appear on all reproductions: This permission statement is limited to the reproduction of material for educational/training events. Systematic or large-scale reproduction or distribution (more than one hundred copies per year)—or inclusion of items in publications for sale—may be done only with prior written permission. Also, reproduction on computer disk or by any other electronic means requires prior written permission. Contact the University of Illinois Agricultural Education Program to obtain special permission. The University of Illinois and its affiliated entities, in addition to the individual submitting the materials, assumes no liability to original work or activities therein. DISEASES, by CALLIE PARR Materials produced for classroom use in conjunction with permission from the University of Illinois Agricultural Education Program.

  2. Diseases

  3. Disease • Can be broken down into infectious and non-infectious diseases • Infectious diseases are a result of pathogens. -Viruses - Protozoa - Parasites - Bacteria - Fungi • Pathogens are carried by vectors. - animals - insects - inorganic surfaces

  4. Koch’s Postulates • Used to detect infectious diseases. • The infectious agent should be detectable in sick animals and not in healthy ones. • It should be possible to isolate and culture the organism. • Organisms taken from the culture introduced into healthy animals should cause the same disease. • The same organism should be isolated from the second animal as well.

  5. Ways a pathogen can enter the body • Wounds – breaks in the skin • Respiratory – breath it in • Mucus membranes – eyes, nose, mouth • Bites – insect bites (same as wound) • Ingestion – eat it (contaminated food/water)

  6. Course of a disease • Exposure – no physical response yet • Incubation – levels of pathogen increase • Prodromal – the first signs of illness • Fever, muscle aches • Decline – either immune system kicks in or medication takes effect • If not, then enter chronic illness • Convalescent – animal regains strength

  7. Bacterial Infections • 4 major categories of bacteria by shape • Staphylococcus • Streptococcus • Bacillus • Spirochete

  8. Bacterial Infections • Sickness is a result of toxins released by the bacteria. • Exotoxins – excreted by cells • Endotoxins – released when cells die • Treatable with antibiotics • Immune System fights with phagocytes • Blood cells that surround and destroy pathogens

  9. Common Bacterial Diseases

  10. Strangles • Streptococcus equi • Horses • Swollen lymph glands in neck, fever, reduced appetite, nasal discharge, abortion • Highly contagious

  11. Scours (E. Coli diarrhea) • Escherichia coli • All species • Animals less than 2 weeks old • Severe diarrhea leading to dehydration and death • Preventable with medication

  12. Pneumonia • Rhodococcus (equi) • All (horses) • Nasal discharge, fever, respiratory difficulty, inflammation that can spread to joints. • Treatable with antibiotics

  13. Leptospirosis • Leptospirosis sp. • All species • Abortions, fever, anemia, jaundice

  14. Pinkeye • Moraxella bovis • Cattle • Inflamed conjunctiva, cloudy cornea, sensitivity to light, fluid discharge from eye • Treatable with topical ointment or systemic antibiotic • Highly contagious

  15. Foot Rot • Fusobacterium necrophorum • Cattle, sheep, goats • Deep infection of the cloven section of the hoof, foul odor, pain, lameness • Preventable with clean facilities • Treatable with antibacterial soaps

  16. Rain Scald/Rot • Dermatophilus congolensis • Horses, cattle, sheep, goats • Crusting of the skin at the base of the hair follicle mostly on the back and rump • Similar to cradle cap in babies • Most prevalent in animals exposed to excessive moisture • Treatable with antibacterial soaps

  17. Lockjaw • Clostridium tetani • Horses, cattle, sheep, goats • Muscle spasms, locked jaws, stiffness of joints, death • Enters through punctures and/or breaks in skin (lives in soil naturally) • Preventable with booster shot

  18. Greasy Pig Disease • Swine • Staphylococcus hyicus • Reddened skin, anorexia, fever, thickened skin with purulent (pus) discharge

  19. Lyme Disease • Borrelia bugdorferi • All species • Spread by ticks • Chronic arthritis, lethargy, loss of appetite, paralysis

  20. Viruses

  21. What is a Virus • No cell wall, no organelles, maybe not even be considered living • DNA or RNA surrounded by a protein coat • Hijack a healthy cell and program it to create new viruses • Destroys host cell in process • Often dies of suppressed immune system or reaction to enzymes released by cells

  22. Treatment • Prevent with vaccine • modified live • killed • Body’s natural immune system • Very limited anti-viral medications

  23. Shipping Fever • Cattle • Bovine Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Bovine Virus Diarrhea, Infectious Bovine Rhinotracheitis, Parainfluenza-3 • High Fever, nasal discharge, coughing

  24. Panleukopenia • Cats • Feline parvovirus • Fever, vomiting, extreme diarrhea, anorexia

  25. Feline Leukemia • Cats • Retrovirus • Chronic weight loss, anemia, anorexia, tumors

  26. Equine Infectious Anemia • Retrovirus • Horses • Fever, hemolytic anemia (breakdown of red blood cells), icterus (jaundice/yellowing), weight loss

  27. Canine Distemper • Canine distemper virus • Dogs • Fever, nasal discharge, seizures, pneumonia

  28. Rabies • All species • Rhabdovirus • Paralysis, inability to swallow (foaming at mouth), aggression, stupor, brain lesions

  29. Pseudorabies • Pigs • Herpesvirus • Shaking, ataxia (gross uncoordination), convulsions, seizures, fever

  30. Fungal Infections

  31. Fungal infections • Usually spread by spores or direct contact • Spores very resistant to heat, moisture, or dryness • Treatable with fungicides

  32. Ringworm • Red, crusty/flaky ring on the skin that expands outwards • Has nothing to do with worms • Microsporum or Trichophyton • Live in hair folicles

  33. Others • Blastomycosis (canine) • Sporotrichinosis (feline, canine) • Cryptococcosis (feline, canine) • Histoplasmosis (feline, canine)

  34. Parasites

  35. What is a Parasite? • Any organism that lives off another organism and causes harm • Detrimental to host’s health in many ways • Compete for nutrients and “starve” the host • Damage tissues of the host • Release toxins into the host • Suck the blood causing anemia • Serve as a vector for bacteria or viruses

  36. Life cycle • May parasites have a complex life cycle that help them survive and spread from one host to another. • Egg, larvae, pupa, adult or egg, nymph, adult • Definitive host is the animal that carries the mature parasite. • Intermediate host carries the immature (egg or larvae) parasite.

  37. Example A dog (definitive host) has a tapeworm (parasite). The head of the tape worm attaches to the lining of the small intestine causing malnourishment. As the parasite develops, segments containing the eggs break off and exit the anus (look like grains of rice). The segments rupture releasing the eggs. A flea larva (intermediate host) on the dog eats the eggs. When the flea matures it jumps onto another animal. The animal bites at the fleas, ingesting the contaminated flea. The tapeworm eggs are released in the second dog’s stomach and move to the small intestine where they hatch and implant completing the cycle.

  38. Intestinal Parasites • Typical clinical signs • Diarrhea • Vomiting • pot-bellied • dull coat • poor weight gain • Anemia • coughing

  39. Common Internal Parasites

  40. Roundworms • Dogs and Cats • Toxocara canis/cati or Toxascaris leonina • Ingested eggs hatch into larvae in the intestine. Lavae travel through liver and lungs. The larvae are then coughed up and re-swallowed where they develop into adults and attach in the intestine. Eggs are shed in the feces. • Passed through ingestion of feces, mother’s milk, placental wall, eat infested animals (rabbits, rats)

  41. Hookworms • Dogs and cats • Ancylostoma sp. or Uncinaria sp. • The larvae are ingested and develop into adults which attach to the intestinal lining and suck blood. Eggs are released in the feces where they hatch into larvae. • Ingest larvae, placental wall, mother’s milk, through the skin of the food pads.

  42. Tapeworms • Dogs and cats • Dipylidium caninum, Taenia pisformis/ taeniaeformis • Requires an intermediate host • eggs/larvae must be ingested

  43. Heartworms • Dogs • Dirofilaria immitis • Adult worms live in the major vessels and chambers of the heart. Clog the blood flow. • Transmitted by mosquitoes (intermediate host) • Incubation time is about 6 months

  44. Strongylosis • Strongylus sp. • Horses • Eggs passed in the feces develop into larvae. Larvae migrate into blood stream causing damage, enter large intestine and mature, then release eggs. • Horse eat the larvae as they graze

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