anaplasma
TRANSCRIPT
THEILERIOSIS
• Three spp. of Theileria
• Theileria parva – East Coast Fever
• T. annulata – Bovine Tropical Theilariosis – In India
• T. mutans – Benign Bovine Theileriosis
• T. annulata – Cattle, yak buffalo (milder infection)
Bos indicus X Bos taurus
Transmission:Various spp. of Ticks – Hyalomma anatolicum anatolicumH. dromedarii, H. marginatum, H. detritum
Epidemiology :
1) All age group exotic and cross bred are highly susceptible
2) Young indigenous calves highly susceptible3) Indigenous cattle and buffaloes –inherent
resistant4) Favourable climate and habitat for the survival
of ticks, responsible for transmission5) Bos Taurus X Bos indicus crosses susceptible
to the disease6) Adult indigenous cattle are generally do not
suffer clinically but are the constant source of infection
Diagnosis :
• Clinical simptoms, knowledge of the disease and tick distribution of the area
1) Clinical symptomsa) High rise of temp.(40.50C to 41.50C).
Theileriosis should be suspected in tick infested animals with fever.
b) Prepatent period – attachment of ticks to onset of fever 10-13 days
c) Enlargement of prescapular lymph nodes
Enlargement of prescapular lymph nodes
d) Decreased rumination
e) Decrease of temp. and development of anaemia with high coloured urine in later stage
f) Reduced milk yield and may abortion
g) Constipation / diarrhoea
h) Lies neck curved back to the shoulder
i) The course of the disease from fever to death ranges from 1-2 wks.
• 2. Exam. of Giemsa-stained blood and lymph node smears
a) Detection of schizonts in WBC and piroplasms in RBC
b) Schizont is a characteristic diagnostic feature of acute infections
* Negative results of microscopic examination of blood films do not exclude latent infection
Peripheral blood smear with Theileria spp.
• 3. P.M. Lesions
a) Enlargement of lymph nodes
b) Enlargement of liver and spleen
c) Numerous ulcers in the m.m. of the abomasums
d) Schizonts may be found in impression smears from most internal organs
• Collection of materialsa) Blood and lymph node biopsies should
be submitted for the detection of Theileria schizont
b) Blood or buffy coat smears and lymph node impressions should be air dried and fixed in methanol
c) Lymph node, spleen, liver should be collected for histopathology
d) Serum for serological tests
Stained impression smear from an enlarged
lymph node of a cow with Theileriosis.
4. Serological Testsa) CFT
b) IFAT
c) ELISA
d) EITB
5) PCR
BABESIOSIS
• ‘Tick borne’ haemoprotozoan disease • Cattle Worldwide– B. bovis, B. bibemina, B.
divergens, B. major • India – B. bovis and B. bigemina• First reported in India by Lingard and Jennins
(1904) – Buffalo• Transmission : 1) Boophilus spp.• Hyalomma, Haemaphysalis,
Rhipicephalus, Dermacentor, Ixodes spp.• 2) Blood transfusion, vaccination
Life cycle
• Epidemiology :
1) Young animals suffer less2) Adult – Acute and chronic forms3) Recovered animals – immune for life 4) Indigenous cattle tend to be more
resistant than exotic cattle• Zoonotic importance:Several human cases of babesiosis have
been recorded
DIAGNOSIS
• A. Clinical symptoms1) Acute disease generally runs for about 1 week2) The first sign is fever (105.80F)3) Inappetance4) Anaemia5) Weight loss6) Haemoglobinurea7) CNS involvement8) Late term pregnant animal may abort9) Bulls may undergo temporary infertility
B. Examination of thin blood smears
a) Blood should be collected from tip of the ear or tail
b) Jugular blood EDTA (1 mg/ml)
c) Kept cool (50C)- until delivery to the Lab. (preferably within hours of collection)
d) Stain blood films as soon as possible to ensure proper stain definition
e) Unstained blood smears should not be stored with formalin solutions as it may affect staining quality
Babesis bigemina parasites in two erythrocytes (top left and bottom right)
Diagram of Giemsa stained Babesia bovis infected erythrocytes.
C. Exam. of P.M. materials
Collection of samples from dead animals
a) Thin blood films as well as smears from
b) Cerebral cortex
c) Kidney
d) liver
e) Lung
f) Unreliable if death occurred 24 hours previously
Giemsa stained liver impression smear from B. bovis field case. Note clumping of infected erythrocytes
(X1000)
E. Animal inoculation test – Splenectomized calf
F. Serological Tests
a) IFAT
b) ELISA
c) PCR
• Anaplasmosis – Form of ‘Tick Fever’• A. marginale, A. centrale (sometimes)
• Protozoan Parasite • Family: Anaplasmataceae (Since 1957)• Order :Rickettsiales• Genera : Anaplasma, Aegyptianella
Haemobartonenella, Eperythrozoan
• Characterized by High fever & progressive anaemia
ANAPLASMOSIS
Transmission
• Ticks (Boophilus, Dermacentor,
• Rhipicephalus, Hyalomma)
• Mechanical transmission – Dipteran Flies
• Transplacental Transmission
• Contaminated needle
Epidemiology
• All ages of cattle may become infected but the severity of illness increases with age.
• 6 months to 3 yrs – increasingly ill• > 3 yrs – 30-50% die• After recovery- Chronic• Inadequate treatment – carrier• Carriers rarely become ill in second time• Unidentified carriers – source of infection for future
outbreak• Outbreaks related – Lack of control programme, the
ratio between anaplasmosis carriers, the amount of vector
• Serious illness – with no previous exposure
Diagnosis
1) By clinical symptomsa) In cattle the incubation period varies from 15-45 days or
more after tick infectionb) Experimentally: C.B. – 24 Days, Indigenous cattle – 29
Daysc) High rise of Temp (40.50C)d) Constipatione) Decrease milk yieldf) May be abortiong) Anaemich) Jaundice but no haemoglobinurea2) Exam. of thin blood smears
Anaplasma marginale in bovine bloodg, located near
the margin oferythrocytes.
3) Animal sub-inoculation Test
4) Spleenectomy
5) Serological Tests
a) Complement Fixation Test
b) Capillary Tube Agglutination Test
c) FAT
d) Card Agglutination Test
e) ELISA
6) PCR