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Review of cholangiohepatitis: gross pathology, histopathology and pathophysiology - the whats and the whys! Stephen Lister Crowshall Veterinary Services Big livers - big words! • Necrotic enteritis (NE) • Clostridium perfringens (CP) • Cholangiohepatitis (CH) Necrotic enteritis • First described in 1961 in England • reproduced by infecting chickens with clostridia • was a significant clinical disease • “disappeared” • now re-emerging as the disease of the moment Necrotic enteritis • Necrotic • enteritis = = dead inflamed intestine The intestines • An important organ • interface between feed and ability to transform this into £.s.d • works best in a state of homeostasis Homeostasis • Homeo = same • stasis = state • i.e. keeping everything in balance The intestines • Chick hatches with a sterile gut • gut is receptive to colonisation with bacteria • development of a balanced gut microflora • numerous bacteria Gut bacteria • • • • • • • • clostridia E coli streptococci staphylococci proteus pseudomonas lactobacillus enterococcus • • • • • • • • citrobacter eubacterium veillonella fusobacterium bacteroides propionobacteria bifidobacteria etc etc Necrotic enteritis • A consequence of the loss of this balance • Enterotoxaemia of chickens caused by toxigenic strains of Clostridium perfringens types A • reproduced by infecting chickens with clostridia • mostly affecting broilers, • but also turkeys, occ. layer and breeder replacements, ducks, geese But why? • Models for creating necrotic enteritis - how to do it! • • • • • feed clostridia feed contaminated with clostridia change gut pH + clostridia coccidial challenge + clostridia high wheat + coccidia + clostridia But why? • Clostridial proliferation • damage to the gut • changes in the gut • loss of homeostasis Effects • Mortality • loss of performance Loss of performance Performance Effect of to 6 weeks removal Liveweight - 50 grams Range FCR +0.04 0 to 0.08 Mortality +0.1% -1.3% to 1.0% 0 to 150 gms Ross Breeders trials looking at effect of removing Maxus from the diet 1999 Effects • Mortality • loss of performance • diarrhoea • wet litter • need to treat • and ….. ….. if that’s not enough! • Carcase rejects and bad colour • liver damage and jaundice • cholangiohepatitis (CH) What is it? • cholangiohepatitis or fibrosing cholehepatitis or septic intrahepatic choleostasis • hepatitis = liver inflammation • septic = infection • intrahepatic = in the liver • choleostasis = bile stops Findings on the processing line • • • • • • • Bad colour jaundice ascites? Enlarged liver tan coloured knobbly appearance speckled liver What is happening? • It is costing money through downgrading • 3 to 5% downgrades not unusual • We know there is an association with NE & CP • often no disease reported on farm • so why do I see CH without seeing NE or any significant increase in mortality? Experimental work • Not a lot of published literature • Onderka et al (1990) in Canada • Experimental reproduction of the problem – ligating the bile ducts – injecting CP into the bile duct Ligating bile ducts • 21 to 28 days of age • 6 days p.l.: intensely yellow droppings • 5 days p.l.: bile duct proliferation • 10 to 14 days p.l.: liver changes • 28 days p.l.: enlarged tan coloured liver, speckled appearance Injecting CP • 5 to 7 days p.i.: swollen mottled livers • 12 days p.i.: pale, firm mottled livers • 17 days p.i.: enlarged, firm, tan coloured, speckled liver What is happening? • Clinical or subclinical NE can lead to CH at processing • clostridial infection of liver/bile ducts can be “silent”, or associated with very small lifts in mortality but still lead to considerable downgrading • timing of clostridial proliferation is not precisely known, but can be <10 days of age But why? • Clostridial proliferation • damage to the gut • changes in the gut • loss of homeostasis But what has changed? • • • • • • • cereal content cereal type use of barley use of whole wheat loss of GPs loss of MBM changes in raw materials • least cost rations • shorter turnaround times • • • • • • • Lighting programmes Less routine antibiotics coccidiostat choice chemical shuttles longer withdrawl times gumboro disease Chick anaemia virus