Quick Facts
Epidemiology
Clinical Signs
100
Causative agent of Johne's disease

What is Mycobacterium avium ssp paratuberculosis?

100

Site of MAP replication

What are macrophages?

100

Incubation period

What is at least 2 years?

*MAP persists in intestinal macrophages for a very long time. Some animals may show clinical signs at <2 yrs since infection. Animals can shed the bacteria and be clinically normal. 

200

Animals most susceptible to Johne's infection + clinical disease 

What are ruminants?

200

Primary site of infection

What are ileal Peyer's patches?

*Ileal lymph nodes also involved

200

Pathogenesis

MAP ingested via fecal-oral route -> invade Peyer's patches -> stimulate host immune response -> phagocytosed by macrophages -> replicate in macrophages -> slow, granulomatous inflammation spreads -> small intestinal wall thickening -> enteritis

300

Treatment protocol

What is no satisfactory treatment? 


*Animals would need to be treated for months for clinical resolution, which is highly impractical + cost prohibitive for many producers. Relapse has been observed in studies as well. 

300

Age at transmission

What are kids, lambs, and calves? 

*The perinatal period is the most common age of infection. Often, clinical signs do not develop until >2 yrs of age

300

Clinical picture

What is a "poor-doer"? 

*Sheep & goats with Johne's will maintain a good appetite but will have chronic weight loss to the point of emaciation. 

400

Zoonotic potential

What is none? 

*Johne's disease only refers to MAP infections in ruminants, but gastroenterologists have noted similarities between Crohn's disease and Johne's disease presentations. However, Crohn's has no known cause or cure

400

Route of transmission

What is fecal-oral route?

*MAP is shed in feces. Manure contaminated water, milk, or feed are common sources. In later stages of infection, dams may shed MAP directly into milk. MAP can survive in low numbers for up to a year in feces.

400

Necropsy findings

What are thickened intestinal loops, dilated lymphatic vessels, GI lymphadenopathy?
500

Diagnostics

What is fecal PCR? 

*Culturing samples takes an extremely long time (8 wks). Fecal PCR best in sheep, blood & milk ELISA available in goats (confirm with fecal PCR).

500

Principles of prevention

What is maintaining a closed herd/only buying replacements from MAP-negative herds?

*Additionally, clean pastures, barns, water & feed troughs are important to prevention. Animals may test positive without any clinical signs, so its important to cull these animals!!

500

Additional CS

What are bottle jaw and wool break?

*Bottle jaw due to protein losing enteropathy, wool break due to malnutrition.