More important sheep
Disease control
Control of Disease
Zoos
Acidosis
100

What is old thin ewe disease

Johnes, meidi-visna, caseous lymphadenitis, parasites, worms, malnutrition 

100

What are the two main categories of disease

Reportable - not typically present in canada

Endemic - common in canada

100

What are the 6 steps to go through with disease control

List of locations/sites used by the operation

Farm diagram

Review pillars of biosecurity

Conduct biosecurity self assessment

analyse the self-assessment 

Establish and action plan to mitigate risk 

100

What are the zoonotic pathogens at lambing in sheep

Oral - Chlamydiosis, campylobacteriosis, listeriosis, Q fever, salmonella, toxoplasma, leptospirosis

Inhalation - Q-fever, listeriosis, chladmydiosis

100

What is the pathogenesis of ruminal acidosis

Single animal or group find a large supply of unprotected grain/carbs 

Feeding erros 

Transition management 

Stubble fields 

Ingestion of excess CHO -> lots of VFAs produced -> strep bovis grows -> increased lactate -> lactate exceeds rumen buffering capacity -> rumen pH <5

200

What is pulpy kidney 

Cl. perfringens type D, - juvenile colstridial hemorrhagic enteritis 

Disease of rapidly growing lambs especially with high CHO diets

associated with waning maternal antibodies

200

What is a reportable disease? examples

Can be locally or nationally catastrophic

high morbidity or mortality 

Human health/political/trade implications 

Diagnosis of the disease must be reported to the regional CFIA office

Bovine Tb, Bovine spongiform encephalopathy, FMD, Cysticercosis 

200

What are the animal movement risks

Movement of high risk or highly susceptible animals 

- high risk = unknown vaccine status, commingled, sick or recently recovered, high risk cattle may look healthy

- highly susceptible = unvaccinated, neonates, recently weaned, pregnancy 

200

What is Q-fever

Bacterial disease

A cause of abortion

Flu-like sickness in people, no clinical signs in animals

200

What is the spectrum of disease 

from simple indigestion to severe acute acidosis (subacute in between)

Flucuating rumen pH, acidosis = 5.2-5.6 for 3 hours or more

300

What is pneumonia 

A complex variety of disorders - enzootic  (barns/younger lambs), acute (feedlot), chronic (old thin ewe syndrome)

300

What is an endemic disease? examples

Production limiting 

Black leg, BVD, resp disease, Scours

morbidity and mortality varies with diease, reduce production, some are zoonotic

300

What are the management points for high risk and highly susceptible animals 

Identify and assess risk

Reduce direct and indirect contact

Disclose health concerns

Treat promptly 

Clean and disinfect 

Group and manage by risk 

Handle healthy and highly susceptible first

300

What are the government regulated Zoonoese

Tuberculosis

Brucellosis

Anthrax

FMD

300

What is the etiology of ruminal acidosis

Step up period, poor bunk management, going off feed for a period of time then back on, timing - feeding late, accidental feeding of higher concentrate diets to the wrong pen

400

Why is nutrition important

Metabolic demands in sheep are higher due to body size, cant tell size with wool 

Need higher quality feed especially in lactation/pregnancy 

malnutrition is the number 1 problem in disease outbreaks

copper is important to not overfeed

400

What are the four steps in biosecurity planning

Assess

Plan

Implement

Monitor 

400

What skin diseases are zoonotic

Orf - skin disease

Ringworm - fungal disease - direct and indirect transmission, self limiting 

400

Why care about Zoonoses

Personal safety

Safety of employees

Farm visitors

Public health

400

What is the sequelae to ruminal acidosis

Chemical and mycotic bacterial rumenitis

Chronic rumenitis and ruminal hyperkeratosis 

liver abscesses 

Posterier vena caval thrombosis syndrome 

laminitis 

polioencephalomalacia 

500

What is orf

Awful disease with no treatment 

Parapox virus - no treatment 

Crusting sores around the mouth and nose

Zoonotic - takes 6 weeks to course thru, and immunity is short lived 

500

What are the four pillars of biosecurity

Animal movements

Movement of people, vehicles, equipment and tools

Animal health practices

Educating, planning and recording

500

What are the enteric zoonotic diseases

Salmonella - fecal-oral transmission, milk and meat

Cryptosporidium - can get into water supplies 

Enterotoxigenic E. coli - many strains = a foodborne strain, and a strain that lives in cattle GI and does no harm but harms humans - can contaminate through water, or manure spreading onto crops, or fecal contamination

Campylobacter - foodborne bacterial infection, can contaminate water

500

What are we gonna do to this exam

CRUSHHHHHH ITTTTTTT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

500

What are the treatment options and how do we deal with an outbreak

Correct the ruminal and systemic acidosis 

Restore fluid and electrolyte losses

Restore forestomach and intestinal motility 

Treat secondary complications

Oral products