Disease investigations what is an important aspect and how to determine
Definition of problem - Comparison to breed standards/targets ○ 1% first week mortality ○ Mortality breeders - 1% per month ○ Broilers now about 3.5% per batch
If mortality is a feature of disease what to do
POST-MORTEMS
Define biosecruity and 3 ways this is upheld
Biosecurity is the prevention or control of contact of pathogens with animal populations
Basics
1. All in all out
○ Easy as day old chick is independent -> can separate
○ Need some time when the whole site is empty in each cycle
2. Single age sites
○ Stops build-up of challenge to later flocks
○ Stop the spread from non-susceptible to susceptible flocks
3. Single purpose sites
○ Only one part of the process
○ Slaughter house isn’t with breeders or growers
Define management and what need to keep in mind
What adjustments are important with management and which vets involved with
• Stock type ○ Males and females • Equipment • Housing • Food quantity • Food quality • Water quality • Lighting • Ventilation • Temperature • Humidity • Stocking density • Biosecurity • Vaccination and medication programme - vets largest impact
Beck what is normal in parrots, diseases and what cause
Beck trimming what used for, how occur and issues
Oropharynx what are some important lesions and main disease in pigeons, what if see lesion
Trichomoniasis (canker) what birds common in, age and how transmitted
• Common in pigeons in small numbers
• Most common in young post-fledgling altricial(when first hatch reliant totally on parents) birds
○ Pigeons, Magpies, Budgies. Raptors
• Transmitted via feeding of young birds, possible sexual behaviour of regurgitation
○ Raptors possibly get infected via prey of infected pigeons
Trichomoniasis (canker) predisposing factors, signs and lesions
• Predisposing factors ○ Immunosuppression diseases - circovirus ○ Stress (overcrowding) ○ Intercurrent disease • Signs ○ Hypersalivation/regurgitation/vomiting ○ Poor growth ○ Severe form - systemic and death • Lesions ○ Diptheretic oral lesions § Thickening oesophagus/crop wall
Trichomoniasis (canker) treatment and control
• Treatment ○ Easily treated with § Ronidazole, emtryl (don't over medicate as can be toxic) - Control ○ Predisposing factors ○ Maximize host resistance ○ Source of infection-> Could be the water supply -> clean this out often ○ Strategic medication § Parents § Fledgelings
List some differential diagnosis other than trichomoniasis for budgies, pigeons and raptors
- Budgies ○ Goitre and other obstructions causing regurgitation ○ Behavioral regurgitation ○ “Megabacteriosis” - a yeast ○ Crop mycosis (regurgitation and lesions) ○ Vitamin A deficiency - Pigeons ○ Herpesvirus ○ Pox - Raptors ○ Helminthiasis ○ Pox
Stomatitis in gallinacious birds (chickens, turkeys) what is not likely and what is likely
Oesophagus and crop when change in what species, variation and what can be found within folds how significant
What are the 2 main diseases of the oesophagus and crop
1) herpes virus
2) crop mycosis (canidiasis, thursh)
herpes virus what lead to and lesions
Crop mycosis cause, predisposing factors and lesions
Crop mycosis diagnosis, treatment and control
Proventriculus function and clinical signs when diseased
Gizzard function
What injury results in issues or both the proventiculus and gizzard
What are the 3 main diseases that cause enlargement of the proventriculus
1) Proventricular Dilation Syndrome (neuropathic gastric dilation, myenteric ganglioneuritis)
2) Megabacteriosis - Avian Gastric Yeast
3) Parasites - nematodes (Tetrameres, Contracaecum)
Proventricular Dilation Syndrome (neuropathic gastric dilation, myenteric ganglioneuritis) what cause, where found, signs, diagnosis and treatment
○ Viral disease
○ Not found too often in Australia mainly in quarantine facilities -> not exotic but not common
○ Signs: anorexia, weight loss, wasting, regurgitation, myelitis - ataxia, treatment
○ Diagnosis: radiography - contrast studies
○ Treatment: supportive: affected birds often die despite treatment
Megabacteriosis - Avian Gastric Yeast what birds most susceptible, cause, signs, diagnosis and treatment/control
○ Budgies/canaries and finches particularly susceptible
§ Finches need special nutrition as omnivores -> maggots, insects help decrease susceptibility
○ Generally occurs with other diseases -> possibly a secondary disease to coccidiosis
§ Predisposing factors -> stress, viral infection, nutrition
○ Signs - weight loss, weakness, high morbidity, some mortality, regurgitation
○ Diagnosis - presence of the yeast rods via faecal smear, also can do via histopathology of proventriculus
§ Found in the proventricular glands
○ Treatment/control
§ Amphotericin B (human or bird version) for a few days
§ Acidify drinking water
§ Balanced diet -> finches as above
§ Probiotics -> not cheap