Common signs of stomatitis?
Excessive drooling - sialorrhea.
Reluctance to eat - anorexia.
Difficulty swallowing - dysphagia.
Resistance to exam of the mouth.
How can stomatitis be classified?
Based on features of the primary/main lesion:
- vesicular.
- papular.
- erosive/ulcerative.
- necrotising.
- lymphoplasmacytic.
- granulomatous.
Infectious aetiologies of stomatitis in the horse.
Oral candidiasis in foals - superficial layers of oral epithelium are involved.
- grossly — patchy pale-grey pseudomembranous material of the oral cavity and tongue that can extend to the oesophagus and stomach.
— lesions are peel-able.
- may indicate immunosuppression.
Vesicular stomatitis - viral, affecting mainly donkeys, horses, cattle and pigs.
- Notifiable.
- Vesicular lesions and secondary ulceration are the main lesions.
- circular, multifocal, hyperaemic border, ulcerated in the centre.
Gastritis in horses.
Uncommon except for those associated with gastric ulceration and parasites.
Grading of squamous mucosa.
Grade 0 = no appearance of hyperkeratosis or hyperaemia and the epithelial walk is intact.
Grade 1 = areas of hyperkeratosis (yellow) and hyperaemia are visualised, but the mucosa wall is still intact.
Grade 2 = minor, single lesions visualised.
Grade 3 = large, single lesions visualised or extensive superficial lesions.
Grade 4 = extensive lesions visualised deep to the mucosa.
2 main parasites involved in parasitic gastritis?
Gasterophilus spp. larvae (botflies).
Draschia megastoma and Habronema spp.
Botfly pathogenesis.
Botflies lay eggs around horse’s mouth.
Horse licks eggs from around mouth and swallows them.
Botflies develop into larvae in the stomach.
Severity of signs and lesions related level of infestation.
Can cause ulceration of the stomach which can progress to rupture.
Draschia megastoma and Habronema spo.
Nematodes.
Use flies to infect.
Come off the flies on the horse.
Horse licks them and then swallows them.
They complete their life cycle in the stomach.
Draschia megastoma produces modular lesions within stomach mucosa.
Habronema produces less invasive lesions in the stomach and in the cutis.
Severity of symptoms and lesions vary.
Principle mechanisms of diarrhoea?
Malabsorption (osmotic).
Increased permeability/effusion.
Altered motility.
Hyper-secretion.
Main cause type of intestinal issues in horses?
Infectious.
Common bacteria affecting the intestines of horses.
Clostridium perfringens type C.
Clostridium difficile.
Clostridium piliforme.
Salmonella spp.
Rhodococcus equi.
Lawsonja intracellularis.
Common viruses affecting the GIT in horses?
Rotavirus and coronavirus.