Parasite types
Management of parasites
Transmission
Spread
Respiration &
100

What are the major mites? who do they infect? what do they do

Chorioptic mange - cattle, horses, sheep, tail head, udder area, hind legs, common in dairy cows confined

Psoropotic mange - Cattle and sheep mite, not seen in canada, mite feces cause allergic reaction with skin, mites that suck the exudates and secretions 

Sarcoptic mange - can infect cattle and sheep, dig tunnels in the skin, spend their whole life on host, dig tunnels under the skin where they deposit eggs, severe damage, hardening and thickening of skin, large folds, federally reportable 

100

What does trichomoniasis look like in the cow

They can carry it and spread it to clean bulls

The parasite lives in the repro tract of the cow

All ages of breeding females are susceptible to infection

cows that are infected will usually conceive normally 

100

What are examples of diseases that are infectious but not contagious

Blackleg in calves - caused by the bacterium clostridium chauvoei, which is present in soil and the intestinal tract

The bacteria can form spores that can exist for a long time, spores are dormant in muscle tissue until there are conditions with low oxygen, spores germinate and bacteria release potent toxins

calves don't pass disease directly to other calves

100

What is the difference between vertical transmission and horizontal transmission? Examples of diseases for vertical?

Vertical - from mother to young = Transmission from one generation to the next usually in utero or via colostrum - bovine leukemia, bovine viral diarrhea virus

Horizontal - From animal to animal - has direct and indirect contact 

100

What does modes of transmission determine

Method of control

200

What do ticks do? what can that cause?

Complex life cycle - involves wildlife 

bit and hang  on until they have completed a blood meal

Extreme numbers can cause blood loss in wildlife

Can carry a number of diseases

200

How do you diagnose parasites

Look for the adult

look for the larvae

look for eggs

look for disease

Typically will need a vet to help

200

What is a disease that is both infectious and contagious

Salmonella 

Primary spread is fecal-oral - can also be spread by fomites, feeding equipment, feed, nipple bottles, esophageal feeders

These can pass by a variety of methods from animal to animal and sometimes other species 

200

What is direct and indirect transmission types (vectors)? Examples of disease ?

Direct - close contact (skin-skin, sexual, carcasses, excretions and secretions), contaminative (airborne, waterborne, soilborne, fomites, food borne)

= Cattle ringworm (skin to skin), tritrichomonas foetus (sexual), bovine spongiform encephalopathy (carcasses), Respiratory diseases (Secretions and excretions)

= Foot and mouth (airborne), anthrax (soilborne), 

Indirect - intermediate host, arthropod vector

= BSE 

200

How are respiratory infections spread

Many in sheep and cattle are spread by droplet transmission - Infectious bovine rhinotracheitis, bovine tuberculosis, foot and mouth

Some are spread through fomites and through indirect transmission - bovine tuberculosis and contaminated feeding areas 

A small amount is spread via airborne transmission - Foot and mouth, Q-fever

300

What are the major protozoa 

Coccidia - single celled organism, lives in the gut wall, can cause severe diarrhea in young stock, oocysts long lived in environment 

Tichomonas

300

How do you control parasites

Understanding lifecycle can really help

Find a way to break the cycle of infection 

- control feed

- Field rotation

- wildlife control

- Controlling vectors 

300

Why is understanding infection disease transmission important

Essential to understanding disease control 

300

What is indirect transmission

Occurs whenever horizontal transmission of the pathogen between two hosts requires another organism

Vector born pathogens cause vector borne diseases and are transmitted between vertebrate hosts by arthropod vectors

Macroparasites are carried by one or more intermediate hosts that are consumed by the final vertebrate hosts to complete a complex life cycle

300

What is the difference between infections in the  respiratory system due to droplet transmission compared to aerosol 

Droplet - close contact, droplets are defined as large aqueous bodies, fall to earth very quickly, more likely to contaminate fomites if pathogen can survive in environment

Aerosol - distant contact, aerosolized particles are infinitesimal, stay suspended in air for much longer periods of time, viruses may be more likely to be diluted and inactivated while lingering in air, this is the type of transmission that is usually referred to as airborne

400

What is tritrichomonas foetus 

A very tiny parasite

Single celled organism

More complex than a bacteria or virus

lives in reproductive tract of cow and bull

3 long whip like projections

400

What treatments can you use for parasites 

Need to be very specific about which drug you use - most drugs do not work  in different classes of parasite

Avermectins

Benzimidazoles

Pyrethroids

others 

Read the label or consult your vet

400

What did Dr John snow do for Infectious disease transmission

He was a medical doctor

He showed that the water companies drawing water from below the sewage outlet had more cholera cases - suggested water was what spread cholera (was thought it was bad air before)

Snow convinced the authorities after an outbreak, pump was disabled

snow is know recognized as the father of epidemiology

400

What are the lifecycle and midges of BTV

Adult midges are vectors, lifespan of adult midges is 20 days, adult midges killed by winter, midges overwinter as aquatic larvae, maximal duration of viremia in host is 63 days

Insect vector transmits virus during feeding -> virus replicates in primary vasculature and draining lymph node, transfer to sites of replication: lungs, lymph nodes and spleen, distributed by blood stream in association with red blood cells -> virus back to vector for onward transmission

400

What is epidemiology

The science concerned with the study of the causes distribution and control of diseases in populations

500

what is T foetus in bulls

Lives in the folds of the sheath and prepuce

Inhabits the microscopic crypts or crevices

bull are the long term carriers of the disease

They are usually infected for life

Older bulls are more likely to remain infected 

500

What's the difference between infectious disease and contagious diseases

Infectious - any disease caused by an infectious organism

contagious - an infectious disease that spreads between animals

All contagious diseases are infectious, but not all infectious diseases are contagious

500

What are steps in the pathogen life cycle (hint 5)

Finding a host

Infection through the outer barrier and establishment in the host

Growth or multiplication of the pathogen inside the host

Reproduction, by exchange of genetic material between co-infecting strains

Development of transmission stages, and transmission to the next host

500
What is a fomite?

Pathogens can be transmitted through an intermediary such as a physical object

Fomite: any substance other than food that may harbour and transmit infectious agents - trucks (Foot and mouth), halters (ringworm), calf tube feeder & nipple bottles(salmonella), human hands (mastitis)

500

What are the 5 objectives of epidemiology

Determination of the origin of a disease whose cause is unknown

Investigation and conotrol of a disease whose cause is either unknown or poorly understood

Acquisition of information on the ecology and natural history of disease 

Planning, monitoring and assessment of disease control programs

Assessment of the economic effects of a disease and analysis of the costs and benefits of control programs

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