Disease
|
Etiology
|
Species
Affected
|
Lesions
|
Remarks
|
|
Ascites
|
Metabolic related to rapid growth
rate and high yield in broilers
|
Young, fast- growing
chickens (males >
females).
|
Enlarged heart. Ascites. Enlarged
or cirrhotic liver. Fibrin exudation in severe
cases
|
Exacerbated by low oxygen
conditions at hatch
or brooding, high altitude, heavy
dust, lung
pathology. Controlled via lighting
programs to
slow growth.
|
|
Anatipestifer infection
|
Pasteurella anatipestifer
|
Ducks, turkeys, other waterfowl
|
Pericarditis, often adhesive.
|
Often with airsacculitis,
fibrinous perihepatitis
|
|
Chlamydiosis
|
Chlamydia psittaci
|
Turkeys, pigeons,
ducks, cage and wild
birds.
|
Pericarditis, often adhesive.
|
Often with
airsacculitis, fibrinous perihepatitis,
splenomegaly, and hepatomegaly.
|
|
Colibacillosis
|
Escherichia coli
septicemia
|
Turkeys,chickens,
commercial ducks
|
Pericarditis, often adhesive.
|
Often with airsacculitis,
fibrinous perihepatitis
|
|
Dissecting aneurysm
(aortic rupture)
|
Unknown.
Noninfectious.
A strong
nutritional
influence,
especially copper
metabolism.
|
Turkeys.
Occasionally,
chickens.
|
Ruptured artery,
usually abdominal aorta.Rarely, aortic arch. Extensive internal
hemorrhage.
|
Sudden deaths in
rapidly growing, highly
conditioned birds.
Losses can be extensive.
Usually in males.
|
|
Listeriosis
|
Listeria monocytogenes
|
All poultry and many
wild birds.
|
Focal myocarditis, pericarditis.
Focal
hepatic necrosis. Encephalitis.
|
Uncommon. May be
secondary. Usually
sporadic losses.
Septicemia or encephalitis may
be only manifestation.
|
|
Marek’s disease
|
Herpesvirus
|
Chickens
|
Focal or multifocal
tumors in the myocardium.
|
May be associated
with tumors in other organ
systems.
|
|
Mycoplasma Gallisepticum infection
|
M. gallisepticum
|
Turkeys, chickens, other poultry
birds
|
Pericarditis, often adhesive
|
Often with airsacculitis,
|
|
Pullorum disease, fowl
typhoid, possibly
paratyphoid
|
Salmonella pullorum,
S. gallinarum,
other salmonellae
|
Chickens, turkeys,
and geese.
|
Nodules in
myocardium. Adhesive
pericarditis.
|
Oophoritis or
orchitis may occur in some adult
birds. Enteric or
septicemic diseases with
diarrhea in young birds
|
|
Round heart disease
|
Possibly toxic agents in
turkeys (antitrypsin and furazolidone
implicated
|
Chickens and turkeys
|
A greatly enlarged, round heart.
Ascites.
Fibrin exudation in severe cases.
|
Uncommon in
chickens. Most outbreaks
associated with
built-up litter. Variable
mortality.
Potentiated by furazolidone treatment
in turkeys.
|
Disease with Signs Suggestive Of CNS Disease.
Disease
|
Etiology
|
Species
Affected
|
Lesions
|
Remarks
|
|
Aspergillosis
|
Usually Aspergillus
fumigatus.
|
Usually young chicks
and poults or
captive
game birds.
|
Various CNS signs.
Respiratory signs
usually precede,CNS
signs and predominate. A minority develop CNS involvement.
|
Yellow mycotic
nodules often grossly visible in brain.
Lesions of
aspergillosis in lungs or air sacs, perhaps in conjunctival sac or globes of
eyes.
|
|
Avian
encephalomyelitis
(epidemic tremor
|
Picornavirus
|
Chicken,
pultsand
Pheasants.
|
Tremors of head and neck and legs.
Paresis leads to
paralysis and
prostration
|
Microscopic lesions
in the CNS. Survivors often develop cataracts. Invert the birds to
accent the tremors for diagnosis.
|
|
Bacterial encephalitis
|
Salmonella S.arizonae,
paratyphoid species,
Escherichia coli.
|
Turkey poults, chicks
|
.Various
CNS signs. Ophthalmitis and
omphalitis often
present in some of the poult
|
Exudate grossly
visible in meninges and ventricles. Confirm by culture.
|
|
Botulism
|
Preformed toxin of
Clostridium botulinum
|
Usually chickens
|
Paresis progressing to paralysis
of legs,
neck, wings, nict-
-itating membrane .Loose feathers.
|
No gross or
microscopic lesions of value. Perhaps putrid feed or maggots in crop.
|
|
Crazy chick disease,
encephalomalacia
|
Vitamin E deficiency
.
|
.
Chicks (usually less
than 8 weeks old),
turkeys (usually 2-4
weeks old).
|
Ataxia, falling and
flying over
backwards, loss of
balance; prostration
with legs
outstretched, toes flexed, and
head and neck back.
|
Hemorrhage and
malacia of cerebellum often
grossly visible.
Confirm by microscopy.Perhaps exudative diathesis along ventrum or
muscle necrosis.
|
|
Dactylariosis
|
Dactylariosis
Dactylaria gallopava
(fungus
|
Turkey
poults, chicks.
|
Incoordination, tremors,
torticollis,
paralysis, perhaps ocular opacities
|
.
Focal gross brain
lesions, often pulmonary
nodules or
airsacculitis. Fungus often in saw dust litter
|
|
Fowl cholera
|
Pasteurella
multocida
|
Turkeys, chickens,
perhaps other species.
|
Abnormal positions
of head and neck.
Ataxia, loss of equilibrium
|
A localized form of
chronic fowl cholera. May/may not accompany acute outbreak.
Lesions may be
present in cranial bones or inner ear.
|
|
Marek’s disease
|
Herpesvirus
|
Chickens usually 6-20
weeks old
|
Paresis progressing to paralysis
of a leg
or wing. Often one leg is held
forward
and one leg is held backward in
the
recumbent bird.
|
Microscopically
there are infiltrating neoplastic
cells in affected
nerve trunks and the CNS.Grossly, lesions may be visible in affected
nerve trunks
|
Diseases with Lesion in the Mouth, Pharynx, Esophagus, Crop, Proventriculus, Gizzard.
Disease
|
Etiology
|
Species
Affected
|
Lesions
|
Remarks
|
Disease
|
Etiology
|
Species
Affected
|
Lesions
|
Remarks
|
|
Candidiasis
(crop mycosis)
|
Candida albicans
|
Poultry, game birds,
perhaps other birds
|
Gray, thin, pseudo-membranous
patches on the mucosa. Little inflammation
|
Often secondary to
parasitism, malnutrition, poor sanitation, impaction, antibiotic usage,
other disease.
Affects any or all organs listed in title.
|
|
Capillariasis
|
Capillaria contorta,
C. annulata
|
Chickens, turkeys,
game
birds.
|
.Worms sewn into
inflamed, thickened
mucosa
|
In the esophagus and
crop. Common in game birds. Scrapings usually necessary for identification.
|
|
Duck plague
(duck virus enteritis)
|
Herpesvirus
|
Ducks, geese, swans
|
Hemorrhage and
necrosis of the
esophageal and cloacal
tissue. Liver has petechial hemorrhages
|
Intranuclear
inclusions produced in infected
tissue.
|
|
Mycotoxicosis
|
Trichothecenes
|
All poultry
|
.Oral ulcerations
|
Produced by Fusarium species of mold
|
|
Pendulous crop
|
If epizootic,
influencedby coarse roughage; or by genetics in turkeys.
|
Turkeys, chickens,
perhaps others..
|
Crop and esophagus
enlarged, perhaps
impacted
|
Secondary mycosis
often present in atonic crop or esophagus. Sporadic cases sometimes fromvagal
paralysis
|
|
Trichomoniasis
(canker
in pigeons;
frounce in falcons)
|
Trichomonas gallinae
|
.
Raptors, doves,
pigeons, turkeys,
chickens.
|
Raised conical masses in mucosa of
mouth, pharynx, esophagus, crop.
|
Many trichomonads in
oral fluids. Lesions sometimes in proventriculus. Also in the liver of
pigeons and some raptors. Lesions often
invasive
|
|
Vitamin A deficiency
|
Inadequate
vitamin A
|
Chickens,turkeys
|
Pustule-like lesions
in esophagus, perhaps mouth and pharynx. Variable
rhinitis, sinusitis,
conjunctivitis. Perhaps excessive urates in urinary tract orcloaca..
|
.Sticky
eyelids and ataxia often the only gross lesions and signs in young birds.
Squamous metaplasia of columnar epithelium in
esophageal mucous
glands and nasal epithelium.
|
|
Wet
pox
|
Poxvirus
|
Most birds, including
poultry
|
1-5 mm yellow-gray plaques in mucosa
of mouth, pharynx, or esophagus.
Less
often
in sinuses or conjunctiva
|
Skin lesions often
on face, wattles, eyelids, comb, feet, legs, ear lobes, caruncle, snood.
|
1 comment:
Diseases with Suggestive Lesions
Diseases with Lesions in the Cardiovascular System
Disease
Etiology
Species Affected
Lesions
Remarks
Ascites
Metabolic related to rapid growth rate and high yield in broilers
Young, fast- growing
chickens (males >
females).
Enlarged heart. Ascites. Enlarged or cirrhotic liver. Fibrin exudation in severe
cases
Exacerbated by low oxygen conditions at hatch
or brooding, high altitude, heavy dust, lung
pathology. Controlled via lighting programs to
slow growth.
Anatipestifer infection
Pasteurella anatipestifer
Ducks, turkeys, other waterfowl
Pericarditis, often adhesive.
Often with airsacculitis, fibrinous perihepatitis
Chlamydiosis
Chlamydia psittaci
Turkeys, pigeons,
ducks, cage and wild birds.
Pericarditis, often adhesive.
Often with airsacculitis, fibrinous perihepatitis,
splenomegaly, and hepatomegaly.
Colibacillosis
Escherichia coli
septicemia
Turkeys,chickens,
commercial ducks
Pericarditis, often adhesive.
Often with airsacculitis, fibrinous perihepatitis
Dissecting aneurysm
(aortic rupture)
Unknown. Noninfectious.
A strong
nutritional influence,
especially copper
metabolism.
Turkeys. Occasionally,
chickens.
Ruptured artery, usually abdominal aorta.Rarely, aortic arch. Extensive internal
hemorrhage.
Sudden deaths in rapidly growing, highly
conditioned birds. Losses can be extensive.
Usually in males.
Listeriosis
Listeria monocytogenes
All poultry and many
wild birds.
Focal myocarditis, pericarditis. Focal
hepatic necrosis. Encephalitis.
Uncommon. May be secondary. Usually
sporadic losses. Septicemia or encephalitis may
be only manifestation.
Marek’s disease
Herpesvirus
Chickens
Focal or multifocal tumors in the myocardium.
May be associated with tumors in other organ
systems.
Mycoplasma Gallisepticum infection
M. gallisepticum
Turkeys, chickens, other poultry birds
Pericarditis, often adhesive
Often with airsacculitis,
Pullorum disease, fowl
typhoid, possibly
paratyphoid
Salmonella pullorum,
S. gallinarum,
other salmonellae
Chickens, turkeys, and geese.
Nodules in myocardium. Adhesive
pericarditis.
Oophoritis or orchitis may occur in some adult
birds. Enteric or septicemic diseases with
diarrhea in young birds
Round heart disease
Possibly toxic agents in
turkeys (antitrypsin and furazolidone implicated
Chickens and turkeys
A greatly enlarged, round heart. Ascites.
Fibrin exudation in severe cases.
Uncommon in chickens. Most outbreaks
associated with built-up litter. Variable
mortality. Potentiated by furazolidone treatment
in turkeys.
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