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Transcript
ACTINOBACILLOSIS
Wooden tongue
Neck
Oral cavity
Leg
Udder
Chest
Tongue
Definition
• It is a chronic infectious disease of
ruminants, caused by actinobacillus ligniersi,
characterized by inflammation of soft tissue
of the head especially tongue (localized firm
swelling of dorsum), less commonly
pharyngeal lymph nodes, facial skin, nares
and esophageal groove. It is sporadic and
self-limiting disease.
Etiology
• Actinobacillus ligniersi (normal commensal
organism in the oral flora of the cattle),
• Gram negative coccobacilli or pleomorphic
rods,
• grow on blood and serum containing media at
20-43oC and need increase in Co2, sticky
colonies, non-hemolytic on blood agar.
• Most of strains grow on MacConkey agar,
• form sulfur granules as white or yellow-white
cheesy accumulation of the organism.
Predisposing factor:
• Oral mucosa injuries by fibrous feed materials or by
foreign bodies and during oral manipulation by hand of
owner or veterinarian
Epidemiology
• Distribution: The disease in cattle is worldwide in
distribution and usually of sporadic occurrence on
individual farms and reported in Egypt.
• Animal susceptibility: Cattle, buffaloes (mature and of
dairy breed are more susceptible), sheep and goats.
• Mode of infection:
• Source of infection: Pus or infected discharges are the main
source of infection.
• Mode of transmission: The disease is transmitted by ingestion of
contaminated food and water with the presence of oral mucosa
injury (wounds or abrasions).
Pathogenesis
• Local infection by the organism causes an acute inflammatory
reaction in the tongue and the subsequent development of
granulomatous lesions in which necrosis and suppuration occur,
often with the discharge of pus to the exterior. Spread to regional
lymph nodes is usual.
• Lingual involvement in cattle causes interference with prehension
and mastication due to acute inflammation in the early stages and
distortion of the tongue at a later stage.
• Visceral involvement is recorded.
• In sheep, there is suppurative infection around head, neck, skin,
rumen, lung, mammary gland and tongue involvement is not
typical.
Clinical signs
• Incubation period is unknown, morbidity and mortality rate is low
and course of the disease is long
• The onset of glossal actinobacillosis is usually acute, the affected
animal being unable to eat for a period of about 48 hours. There is
excessive salivation and gentle chewing of the tongue
• On palpation the tongue is swollen and hard, particularly at the
base, the tip often appearing to be normal
• Nodules and ulcers are present on the side of the tongue and there
may be an ulcer at the anterior edge of the dorsum.
• In the later stages when the acute inflammation is replaced by
fibrous tissue, the tongue becomes shrunken and immobile and
there is considerable interference with prehension.
Clinical signs
• Lymphadenitis is common and is often independent of
lesions in the tongue. There may be visible and palpable
enlargement of the submaxillary and parotid nodes. Local,
firm swellings develop and often rupture with the
discharge of thin, non-odorous pus
• Cutaneous actinobacillosis is also recorded with
actinobacillosis granulomas occurring on atypical but
visible areas such as the external nares, cheeks, skin or
eyelid, and hind limbs
Neck
Oral cavity
Leg
Udder
Chest
Tongue
Clinical signs
• Sheep
• Tongue is not usually involved. lesion up to 8 cm in
diameter present on lower jaw, face, nose, in the skin
folds from lower jaw to sternum, these lesions are
superficial or deep, usually extended to cranial or
cervical lymph nodes, it discharge viscid yellow green
pus containing granules through number of openings.
• Sever lesions are fibrosed and physically interfere with
prehension (difficult eating causes starvation) and
respiration, nose may be involved causing persistent
bilateral nasal discharge and lips may be involved
resulting in thickening and scabbiness of lips.
Postmortem lesions
• The granulomatous lesion of tongue and visceral organs
can be seen.
Diagnosis
• Field diagnosis: It depends on clinical signs of disease
as fever, tongue protrusion, salivation and history of
feeding on hard food objects beside the epidemiology of
the disease.
• Laboratory diagnosis:
• Samples: Pus, smear or biopsy from the lesion, parts of
lesion on ice or formalin, blood and serum.
• Laboratory procedures:
• Direct examination of stained smears after staining with Gram
stain.
• Culture of the suspected material on blood agar.
• Histopathological findings.
• Serotests.
Differential diagnosis
• The disease may be confused with:
• Actinomycosis: It involves hard tissue and rarely soft one.
• TB, especially with atypical form, differentiates on basis of
tuberculin test.
• Abscess of throat region, contain single cavity and discharge thin
pus and readily heal after drainage
Treatment
• Oral or intravenous dosing of iodides may be used. Potassium iodide, 6-10
g/day for 7-10 days, given orally.
• Treatment may be continued until iodism develops. Lacrimation, anorexia,
coughing, and the appearance of dandruff indicate that maximum systemic
levels of iodine have been reached.
• Sodium iodide (1 g/12 kg body weight) can be given intravenously as a 10%
solution in one dose to both cattle and sheep.
• One course of potassium iodide or one injection of sodium iodide is usually
sufficient for soft-tissue lesions, the acute signs in actinobacillosis
disappearing in 24-48 hours after treatment. At least one or preferably two
further treatments at 10- to 14-day intervals are required for bony lesions.
• The sulfonamides, penicillin, streptomycin, and the broad-spectrum
antibiotics are also used. Streptomycin, given by intramuscular injection (5
g/day for 3 days)
Control
• Restriction of the spread of disease is best implemented
by quick treatment of affected animals and the prevention
of contamination of pasture and feed troughs.
• Isolation or disposal of animals with discharging lesions is
essential, although the disease does not spread readily
unless predisposing environmental factors cause a high
incidence of oral or skin lacerations.