Infectious Bronchitis is a highly contagious viral respiratory disease of chickens that causes respiratory signs and decreased egg production. It is caused by a coronavirus with multiple antigenic variations. Transmission occurs via inhalation of droplets from infected birds. Clinical signs include coughing, sneezing and nasal discharge. The disease causes economic losses through reduced egg production and quality. Diagnosis involves virus isolation, PCR and serology tests.
Infectious Bronchitis is a highly contagious viral respiratory disease of chickens that causes respiratory signs and decreased egg production. It is caused by a coronavirus with multiple antigenic variations. Transmission occurs via inhalation of droplets from infected birds. Clinical signs include coughing, sneezing and nasal discharge. The disease causes economic losses through reduced egg production and quality. Diagnosis involves virus isolation, PCR and serology tests.
Infectious Bronchitis is a highly contagious viral respiratory disease of chickens that causes respiratory signs and decreased egg production. It is caused by a coronavirus with multiple antigenic variations. Transmission occurs via inhalation of droplets from infected birds. Clinical signs include coughing, sneezing and nasal discharge. The disease causes economic losses through reduced egg production and quality. Diagnosis involves virus isolation, PCR and serology tests.
Infectious Bronchitis is a highly contagious viral respiratory disease of chickens that causes respiratory signs and decreased egg production. It is caused by a coronavirus with multiple antigenic variations. Transmission occurs via inhalation of droplets from infected birds. Clinical signs include coughing, sneezing and nasal discharge. The disease causes economic losses through reduced egg production and quality. Diagnosis involves virus isolation, PCR and serology tests.
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Infectious Bronchitis(IB)
• IB is an acute, highly contagious, viral disease of
chickens, upper respiratory tract disease • Chracterised by respiratory signs: gasping, sneezing, coughing and nasal discharge • Severe renal disease associated with nephrotroic strains • Marked decrease in egg production • Infections of IB along with Mycoplasma and E.coli is common Occurence • IB occurs naturally only in chickens • All ages are susceptible • Present in all countries Historical information • 1930 IB first observed in young chicks • 1940’s IB serious disease of laying flocks causing marked loss in egg production • 1960’s nephrogenic strains observed • 1936 IB virus first isolated, multiple serotypes in 1956 • 1950’s vacicnation commercially available Etiology • IB is caused by Corona virus, only causes disease in chickens • Worldwide in distribution • Virus fairly labile and can be destroyed by many common disinfectants • The virus can survive in 50% glycerin in most mailed tissue specimens • Fresh trachea and lungs from infected chickens appropriate sample for virus isolation • Antigenic variations among IB viral strains exist and many serotypes identified and has capacity to mutate • Four common serotypes conecticut, Massachusetts, Arkansas 99 and 072 used for vaccine production • Cross protection among serotypes is highly variable • Nephrotropic strain can induce significant mortality Epizootilogy • Transmission of IB is by inhalation of virus containing droplet expelled by infected, coughing chickens • Aerosal transmission occurs • Spread of infection in a flock is rapid • Spread by fomites can occur • Virus in contaminated premises can persist for 4 weeks under favourable condition • Fewer birds may remain carriers and shedders of virus for months after infection The severity of disease and body system involved are influenced by • Strain of the virus • Age , strain , immune status of chicken • Cold stress • Co infection with Mycoplasma gallisepticum, E. coli can exacerbate disease Clinical signs Respiratory syndrome is the most common in birds of all ages Baby chicks • Coughing, sneezing, trachial rales • Conjunctivitiis and dyspnoea • Nasal and occular discharge • Morbidity is virtually 100% • Signs can develop 48 hrs post infection • Weakness, depression and huddling near heat source • Feed consumption and weigt gain reduced • Mortality in young chicks is negligible unless complicated by another infectious agent • Nephropathogenic strain can cause initial respiratorysigns, depression, ruffled feathers, increased water intake and high mortality(30%) Laying chickens • Coughing, sneezing, and rales • Nasal or occular discharge • Lacrimation and facial swelling • Egg production drops rapidly upto 50% • Effects can last for 6-8 weeks or longer • Eggs are often soft shelled or misshapened with thin,soft, wrinkled, rough, pale shells, smaller and • Most outbreaks mortality is appox. 5% can be as high as 60% • Cause damage to the functional oviduct • Egg albumin may be watery • Air sacculitis due to secondary bacterial infection eg E. coli, Mycoplsma gallisepticum • Swollen pale kidneys and urolithiasis in pullets induced by nephrotropic strain Lesions • Mild to moderate inflammation of upper respiratory tract • The trachea, sinuses and nasal passages may contain erous, catarrhal or caseous exudates • Severe air sacculitis: marked thickening and opacity with much exudate in air sac, • complicated by E. coli: caseous air sacculitis, perihepatitis and pericarditis • Older birds are more resistant • Yolk material present in peritoneal cavity and Ovarian fllicles appear flaccid • Abnormalities of oviducts particularly middle third • Oviduct may be hypoplastic or cystic and deposit of eggs in the abdominal cavity • Infection with nephropathogenic strains results in swollen Kidneys, pale in colour and ureter and tubules distended with urates in young birds Infectious bronchitis(IB) Histopathology • Trachea shows hyperplasia of the epithelium • Trachea and brnchi show loss of cilia and sloughing of epithelium • Sub epithelial mucosa shows congestion, oedema, haemorrhages, heterophils and lymphocytic infiltration • Mucopurulent exudate in tracheal lumen • Junction of Isthmus and magnum show atrophy of epithelium , loss of cilia and focal accumulation of lymphocytes and plasma cells • Kidneys interstitial nephritis, show focal infiltration of lymphocytes and plasma cells, tubules with dilatation and hyaline casts • The virus causes grannular degeneration, vacuolation and desquamatin of the tubular epithelium • Focal areas of necrosis may be seen Diagnosis • VN • ELISA • Hi • Isolation and identifiaction of virus: 9-12 days old SPF chicken embryos-embryo, in seven days will show dwarfing/stunting,curling • Trachea, lungs, air sacs and kidneys are good source of virus • RT PCR • FAT • 12 days embryo inoculated with supernatant containing IB virus develop lesions • IB virus causes dwarfing and stunting of embryos also amnion and allntois are thickened and closely invest the embryos • Egg fluid from inoculated embryos do not haemagglutinate erythrocytes if IB virus is present Infectious Laryngotracheitis ILT • ILT is an economically important acute viral respiratory disease of chickens, pheasants and peafowl • It is highly contagious • Chracterised by severe dyspnoea, coughing, gasping, rales and expectoration of bloody exudate Occurrence • Most outbreaks in chickens occur in broilers more than 4 weeks of age or in mature chickens Etiology • ILT is caused by Gallid Herpes virus I(ILTV), 80-110nm in size • The virus is readily destroyed by many disinfectants. • There is only one immunogenic strains although strains varies in pathogenicity • Herpes virus infection leads to the formation of type A intranuclear inclusions • Inclusions observed intracheal epithelial cells occasionally in conjunctival epithelium and chorio allantoic membrane of embryonated chicken eggs Epizootiology • Some recovered chickens and vaccinated chickens become carriers and shed virus for long period of time • Can shed virus following stress induced reactivation • Mechanical transmission of virus via fomites • Lateral transmission • Severe in adult birds but mild in chicks below 3 weeks of age Clinical signs • Affected birds are anorectic and in active • The birds below 3 weeks of age show conjunctivitis and watery fluid between eyelids • Marked dyspnoea, often with loud gasping sounds and coughing • Severely affected chickens often raise and extend their head and neck during inspiration and make loud wheezing sounds • Expectoration of bloody mucoid exudate as a cosequence of coughing and head shaking • Extention of the during inspiration seen 5-12 days after exposure • Beaks, faces or feathers of occasional birds may be bloody • High morbidity and considerable mortality • It is due to occlusion of the trachea by haemorrhage or exudate • Morbidity as high as 50-70% • Mortality in 10-20% range • Lowered egg production • The disease also persists for 2-6 week in the flock • Signs of low pathogenicity include conjunctivitis, with watery eyes, lachrymation, nasal discharge, swollen infraorbital sinuses and lowered egg production • Recovered birds remain carriers for life and become a source of infection for susceptible birds Lesions • Severe laryngotracheitis with bloody or caseous exudate in the trachea • Lesions vary from mucoid inflammation to severe degeneration of the mucosa with haemorrhage • Inflammation may extend into bronchi and air sacs • In PM birds may have an occluding pseudomembrane or caseous plugs in the tachea • Death occur due to suffocation • Infected birds have a bloody beak or blod on the face, head or feathers • In less pathogenic outbreaks mild conjunctivitis and sinusitis • Microscopic examination of trachea of birds killed during first few days of the disease may reveal intra nuclear inclusion bodies in epithelial cells • Loss of goblet cells • Cells lose cilia, becomes oedematous • Similar inclusions can be demonstrated in the chorioallantoic membrane of infected chicken embryos and in infected tissue culture cells Diagnosis • The clinical signs and chracteristic lesions • Demostration of IN inclusions in the trachea and conjunctiva mucosal epithelium during early stage of the disease • Immunofluorescence/ FAT: demontration of viral antigen • Chick Embryo inoculation- 10 days: growth of virus on the chrioallantoic membrane(CAM)-typical plaques are produced and inclusions can be demonstrated • PCR Infectious Bursal disease IBD • Also known as Gumboro disease, Infectious bursitis and infectious avian nephrosis • Infectious bursal disease is an acute, highly contagious, viral disease of young chickens and turkeys • Characterised by diarrhoea, vent picking, trembling, incoordiation, • Inflammation followed by atrophy of the Bursa of fabricius • Variable degree of immuno-suppression Occurence • Occurs primarily in chickens • Clinical signs and mortality are generally more severe in birds 3-6 weeks old • IBD may occur in chickens as long as they have a functional Bursa of Fabricius(1-16 weeks of age) • The younger the birds at the time infection the more severe the immunosuppression increasing susceptibility to pathogens • Once the premises has been contaminated with IBD virus the disease tends to reoccur, usually as a subclinical infection • In turkeys subclinical infection with IBD virus occurs without immunosuppression • Ducks can also be subclinically infected with no resultant immunosuppressin • Occurs in major poultry producing countries of the world Historical information • In 1962 IBD was reported in farms near Gumboro, Delaware • In Nepal, 1992/93 severe outbreaks in growing birds • Initially the disease was confused with a variant form of IB accompanied by nephrosis • Reported in many countries throught the world Etiology • IBD is caused by a Birna virus(Infectious Bursal Disease Virus:IBDV) belonging to Birnaviridae • The virus genome has two double stranded RNA segments • Two serotypes exist with only serotype 1 being pathogenic and there are six strains causing immunosuppression because of loss of B lymphocytes • Serotype 2 strains of the virus infects chickens and turkeys but have not caused clinical disease or immunosuppression in these hosts • IBDVs have been identified in other avian species including Penguins • The virus is very resistant to most disinfectants and environmental factors • It persists for months in contaminated houses and for weeks in water, feed and droppings • It can be transmitted by fomites • It has some susceptibility to formalin and iodide disinfectants • The virus is lymphocidal and severely damages Bursa of Fabricius • The thymus, spleen and caecal tonsils are also damaged but less severely • it severely damages humoral response of susceptible chicks when they are infected at less than 3 wks of age • Those chicks then do not respond properly when vaccinated with other diseases • IBH and gangrenous dermatitis occur frequenly in such flocks • Some live vaccines may have a similar potential for damage as field infections • The Passive transfer of maternal antibodies to baby chicks is very important for the prevention of early infections with virus • Breeder flocks must be vaccinated • Progeny from vaccinated flocks will resist infection for 2-4 wks • Passive immunity will interfere with vaccinations and is necessary to vaccinate chickens after maternal immunity has fallen Epizootiology • The virus spreads rapidly from infected chicks and from contaminated premises or fomites to susceptible chicks • The disease is highly contagious • Mortality is found to be higher in layers than broilers • Transmission of virus through the egg does not occur and no evidence of carrier state • The lesser meal worm(Alphitobius diaperinus) harbours the virus for weeks after an outbreak and may tranmit it to susceptible birds • The worm live in poultry litter Clinical signs • Infection can be clinical and subclinical • Infections before 3 weeks of age are usually subclinical • Subclinical infection cause severe longlasting immunosuppression due to destruction of immature lymphocytes in bursa of fabricius, thymus and spleen • Clinical disease is observed only after 3 wks of age • Chickens are most susceptible at 3- 6 weeks when immature B cells populate the bursa and maternal immunity has waned • There is sudden onset in first outbreak • Onset of disease occurs after Incubation period of 3-4 days • Severe prostration, incordination, Tremor, unsteadiness, depression, anorexia and ruffled feathers like in coccidiosis • Diarrhoea and dehydration • Occasionally voiding of blood and straining during defaecation • Vent picking • Morbidity very high upto 100% and mortality can range from 5% to >60% depending on strain of the virus • Virulence of the field virus varies and can be naturally attenuated, very virulent(vv), vvIBD can cause high mortality Lesions • Initially Bursa is enlarged to twice the normal size, severely edematous and reddened • It may contain haemorrhages • It can become enlrged with yellowish coloured transudare on the surface • Th swelling recedes about the 5th day and bursa atrophies rapidly from the 8th day onward • Increased mucus in intestine • Haemorrhages are common in thigh and pectoral muscles and at the junction of proventriculus and gizzard(vvIBDV) • Some IBDV virus can cause atrophy of Bursa Infectious bursal disease( Gumboro disease) • The kidneys may be swollen, ureters may contain urates • Necrotic lesions / atrophy of other lymphoid organs eg Thymus, spleen particularly with highly virulent IBD virus • Microscopically in the Bursa , lymphoid follicle depletion and destruction followed by atrophy • Similar changes occur in spleen thymus and caecal tonsils • Some strains of the virus cause few clinical signs and minimal gross acute changes in the bursa Diagnosis • Clinical signs and lesions • AGPT • ELISA • VN • Microscopic bursal lesions for lymphocyte depletion in Bursal follicles • Direct FAT • RT-PCR Chicken infectious anaemia CIA, Blue wing disease • Anemia Dermatitis syndrome, Haemorrhagic Aplastic Anemia syndrome • Chicken infectious anaemia (CIA) is a disease of chickens caused by an unclassified virus • It is characterised by aplastic anaemia, decreased weight gain, lymphoid depletion, subcuaneous and intramuscular haemorrhage and immunodepression Occurence • CIA is ubiquitus in all major chicken producing countries of the world Historical information • CIA virus was first isolated in Japan in 1979 • Previously described as Blue wing disease, aplastic anaemia and haemorrhagic anaemia Etiology • CIA virus(CAV), 25 nm, has a circular, single stranded, negative sense, DNA similar to porcine circo virus. • Previuosly described as circo virus • Gyrovirus genus of Anelloviridae family • CIA virus is difficult to isolate due to restricte cell lines suitable for propagation • Most chicken embryo cell lines and chicken embryos are resistant to infection or produce low virus yields Epizootiology • Ubiquitous in poultry producing areas of the world • Chicken are the only known hosts • All ages are susceptible to infection but clinical disease is seen only during the 1st 2-3 weeks • Age resistance is delayed by simultaneous infection with IBD • Vertical and horizontal transmission occurs by faecal-oral route • Contaminated litter is a common source of virus introduction Clinical signs • Anaemia characterised by hematocrit values ranging from 6-27% (normal 35%) • Nonspecific clinical signs include depression, paleness, anorexia, lethargy and • Reduced weight gain • Watery and slowly clotting blood, • High mortaliy in secondary infections • Morbidity and mortality rates vary depending upon immune status due to other infections eg IBD, MD or reticuloenditheliosis • Mortality is usually 5-10% buy can reach 60% • Anemia, leukopenia pancytopenia in blood smears Lesions • Organs are pale, the thymus is generally atrophied • Gangrenous dermatitis and blue wing diseasehymic atrophy • Fatty yellowish bone marrow • Bursal atrophy can also be seen • Bone marrow is pale or yellow • Swollen mottled liver • Haemorrhages in the mucosa of the proventriculus, subcutis and muscles • Lesions of secondary bacterial infections • Microscopcal lesions with depletion of lymphoid cells in primary and secondary lymphoid organs specially of thymic cortex • Granulocytic and erythrocytic compartments in bone marrow atrophic or hypoplastic Chicken Infectious anaemia(CIA) CIA contd Diagnosis • Clinical signs and gross lesions • Isolation and identification of the virus by bioassay in susceptible 1 day old chicks • ELISA • VN • Indirect immunofluorescence • PCR Marek’s disease • Marek’s disease is a highly contagious herpes virus(MDV) induced neoplastic disease of chickens • Polyneuritis, Fowl paralysis, Range paralysis, Neurolymphomatosis • One of the most Ubiquitous infections • It is characterised by infiltration of various nerve trunks and organs with pleomorphic lymphoid cells(T cells lymphomas) and peripheral nerve enlargement Occurrence • Important primarily in chickens rarely observed in turkeys and jungle fowl • Qual can be naturally infected • The disease most cmmonly occurs in young sexually mature chickens 2-7 months old but can occur at virtually any age beyond 3 weeks Historical information • 1907, Hungarian Veterinarian Joseph Marek first description of MD • 1924 USA first report • 1967 herpesvirus was isolated and identified Etiology • Marek’s disease virus is a member of te genusardi virus within the subfamily Alphaherpesvirinae • Herpes viruses associated with Marek’s disease are classified into three serotypes • Gallid alphaherpes virus 2(MDV Serotype 1) isolates are ubiquitous in chickens and vary from pathtypes designated as mild(m), virulent(v), very virulent (vv) and very virulent plusvirulent plus((vv) • Gallid alphaherpes virus 3(Serotype 2) isolates are common in chickens and are nononcogenic • Meleagrid alphaherpes virus 1(turkey herpes virus, MDVSerotype 3)represent avirulent virus strain isolated from tukeys and chickens and commonly used asvaccines against Marek’s disease • The three serotypes have considerale antigenic cross reactivity • The virus can be grown in cultured chicken embryo kidney cells and in duck embryofibroblsts • It produces distinct cytopathic effect with intranuclear inclusions in those cells • The virus is tightly bond to living cells and in this form is very labile • Cell free virus is released from the feather follicle epithelium and is relatively resistant to environmental factors • Susceptible to common disinfectants Epizootiology • Infected chickens shed virus conatining feather follicle dander, which is a source of infection for other chickens by respiratory route • Carrier birds can shed virus throughout their lifetimes • The disease is very contagious and infectious dander can be disseminated over long distances • Dander containing infectious enveloped virus particles is the most important means of transmission • The virus matures into a fully infective, enveloped form in the epithelium of the feather follicle from which it is release into environment • It my survive for months in poultry house litter or dust • Dust or dander from infected chickens is effective in transmission • Mareks disease virus is not vertically transmitted Pathogenesis
• Pathogenesis of Marek’s disease can be described in
four phases of infections • 1- Early productive and restrictive virus infection cusing mainly degenerative(cytolytic) changes • 2- Latent infection • 3- Asecond phaseof cytolytic , productive – restrictive infection causing permanent immuno suppression • 4- A proliferative phase involving non-productively infected lymphoid cells which may or may not progress to lymphoma formation Clinical signs • The incidence of Marek’s Disease is quite variable in commercial flocks and depends on • Strain and dose oof the virus • Age exposure • Maternalantibody • Host gender and genetics • Satrain and dose of the vaccine virus • Sveral environmental factors including stress • Birds with visceral tumours are depressed are often cachectic prior to death • Birds with lymphoid infiltration of peripheral nerves may demostrate partial paralysis • Blindness is associated with lymphoid infiltration of the iris • Clinical signs do not appear prior to 3 weeks of age and peak between 2-7 months Lesions • Gross enlargement and yellowing and loss of cross striations of peripheral nerves(vagus, brachial and sciatic nerves) • Discoloration of the iris • Enlargement of feather follicles withreddening(skin leukosis) • Visceral tumours involving liver, heart, spleen, gonad, kidney, muscles,proventriculus and other organs and tissues • Bursa frequently atrophic • Microscopically the lymphomas are characterised by a mixture of pleomorphic lymphocytes • The tumor cells appear in interfollicular areas • A few of these are true tumour cells that carry T cell surface antigens and a tumour associated antigen(MATSA) Marek's disease Diagnosis • History, age of birds affected and location of neoplastic lesions in affected chickens • Marek’s disease often occurs in 2-5 months old( sexually immature) chickens but can occur after onset of egg production • Nerve involvement • Absence of bursal lesions • Pleomorphic lymphocytes cmprising lesions • Exhibiting MATSA Avian Leukosis Complex/ Sarcoma viruses
• Avian leukosis(ALV) sarcoma group are caused by
Alpharetrovirus genus of the family Retroviridae • Retroviridae contains a diverse group of RNA viruses(tumor viruses) • These viruses contain reverse transcriptase, RNA dependant DNA polymerase • Infection leads to uncotrolled cellular proliferation • Neoplastic diseases of mature chickens • It comprises lymphoid leucosis, erythroblastosis and myeloblastosis, myelocytomatosis • A variety of tumors such as fibrosarcoma, hemangiomas and nephroblstomas and bone disorder osteopetrosis Lymphoid leukosis is a neoplastic disease of poultry characterised by Enlargement of liver by infiltrating lymphoblasts • A gradual onset in a flock, • Persistent low mortality, • Neoplasia of the bursa of Fabricius • With metastasis to many other internal organs: liver, spleen and kidney • A new strain of ALV “J” causes myeloid leucosis(myelocytomatosis Occurence • Lymphoid leukosis associated mortality is most common in chickens of >16weeks of age • Incidence highest at about sexual maturity • The disease is world wide in distribution • With ALV J meat type of chickens appear to be more susceptible than layers Historical information • 1868 first report of LL by Roloff Etiology • Caused by a family of retroviruses known as avian lekosis viruses • Classified into 10 groups • A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H, I and J • Sub group A are more common and most frequently associated with LL • Sub group B occasionally isolated and C and D are rare • Subgroup E viruses are common rarely associated with neoplasms(non-oncogenic) • Subgroup F,G,H, and I viruses primarily cause leukosis in species other than chickens • ALV J viruses have extensive antigenic variations within the strain • The viruses can be cultured in chicken embryo fibroblasts but produce no cytopathology and are detected by antigen tests Epizootiology • Chickens are the natural hosts for all virusesof the leukosis/sarcoma groups • These viruses have not been isolated from other avian species exceptpheasants, patridges and quail • Vertical transmission through eggs is most important • Chickens also can be infected by contact exposure particularly with ALV-J which is more efficient in horizontal transmission Pathogenesis • Lymphoid leukosis is a clonal malignancyof the bursal dependent lymphoid system • Transformationinvarirably occurs in the intact bursa, often as early as 4-8 weeks after infection • Tumors are often not detectable until 14 weeks of age, • Death rarely occurs before 14 wks of age and is frequent around time of sexual maturity • The tomors are composed entirely of B lymphocytes Clinical signs • Chickens with LL have few typical clinical signs • These may include anorexia, weakness, pale comb, shrivelled, diarrhoea, dehydration and emaciation • Lossof egg production • Many birds with tumors are unthrifthy or emaciated and have pale head parts • Enlargement of the abdomen may result from massive enlargement of the liver • Flocks with high infection rates experience depressed egg production Lesions • There are no external lesions • Lymphomas seen in many organs in chickens of > 16 weeks of age, • Diffuse or nodular tumors are common in liver, kidney, ovary, mesentery and Bursa of Fabricius-pathognomonic • Microscopically the tumor cells are uniform,large lymphoblsts • Mitotic figures are frequent • Hemangiomas may also be seen • Microscopically the neoplastic cells in tumours are uniformly lymphoblastic and cells are pyroninophilic • The tumors originates from B cells Avian lymphoid leukosis Diagnosis • History, clnical signs, gross and histopatholgy • Consideration of age of affected chicken • The course of disease and pattern of mortality in the flck, location of gross lesions • Involvement of Bursa of Fabricius always present • In contrast to MD bursal tumors are intrafollicular causing nodular enlargment • Immunohistochemistry, PCR, virus isolation DD of Avian tumors Gross lesions organ MD LL Liver +++ +++ Spleen +++ +++ Nerves +++ - Skin +++ + Gonads +++ +++ Heart +++ + Bursa + +++ Itestine + ++ Lungs +++ ++ Kidneys +++ +++ DD of Avian tumors Gross lesions characteristic MD LL Histology Pleomorphic + - Uniform blast cells - + Antigens MATSA + - Ig M + +++ B cell + +++ T cell +++ + Age of occurrence Peak time 2-7 4-10 Limits >1 >3