Neonatal diarrhoea

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Neonatal diarrhoea Rota and coronaviruses October 6, 2010

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Neonatal diarrhoea. Rota and coronaviruses October 6, 2010. Rotavirus Coronavirus BVD Bredavirus Calicivirus Parvovirus Astrovirus. Viral causes of diarrhoea in neonates. Rotaviruses 4 to 14 days Coronavirus 4 to 30. Susceptibility of neonates. 4 days. 0. Colostral - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Neonatal diarrhoea

Page 1: Neonatal diarrhoea

Neonatal diarrhoea

Rota and coronavirusesOctober 6, 2010

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Viral causes of diarrhoea in neonates

• Rotavirus• Coronavirus• BVD• Bredavirus• Calicivirus• Parvovirus• Astrovirus

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Susceptibility of neonates

• Rotaviruses 4 to 14 days• Coronavirus 4 to 30

0 4 days

ColostralAntibodies in gut

Susceptible period

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Prevention of viral diarrhea in calves

• Vaccination of pregnant animals• Colostrum for 2 weeks• Management

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vaccines against calf diarrhoea

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Rotaviruses

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Viruses with ds RNA genomes

Reoviridae

Birnaviridae

rotaviruses

bluetongue virus

african horse sickness

infectious bursal disease (chickens)

infectious pancreatic necrosis (salmonid fish)

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Rotaviruses

• 7 groups and many serotypes• DS, segmented genome• Unenveloped• Inactivated by phenolic disinfectants• Relatively insensitive to chlorination• Persistence?

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Rotavirus structure, serogroups and serotypes

VP4

VP7VP6

VP3

VP2

VP1

7 Groups(A->G)

14 serotypes(G)

12 serotypes(P)

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Segmented genomes of rotaviruses

implicationselectropherotyping

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Bovine rotaviruses

Group A > B>CMost Group A, serotypes G6 and G10

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Pathogenesislactase

water

water

Undigested milk

Shortened and fusedvilli

http://www.bovilis.com/diseases/ncd/pathogenesis.asp

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Maintenance of rotaviruses in populations

• stable in environment• mucosal antibody more important than

systemic antibody• persistence and periodic shedding

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Diagnosis

• Detection of virus in fecal smears by FAT– FAT for GrA (PDS)

• feces, $22 includes coronavirus• jejunum, ileum, $38.50, includes coronavirus

• EM and immune EM• antigen capture ELISAs (human test for Gr A

rotaviruses)– 80 to 95% sensitivity and specificity compared to RT-

PCR (Maes et al. 2003, J. clin micro 41:290)

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Coronaviruses

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Viruses with +ve RNA genomesPicornaviridae

Caliciviridae

Coronaviridae

Arteriviridae

Flaviviridae

Togaviridae

foot and mouth disease virus

porcine enteroviruses

feline calicivirus

equine arterivirus

pestiviruses (BVD)

coronaviruses

equine encephalitis viruses

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Coronaviruses

• SS +ve RNA• Enveloped• Epithelial cells of gut and respiratory tract• Persistent infections• Increased shedding in winter and at calving

(bovine corona virus)

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Diagnosis

• FAT on fecal or gut samples ($22.50-38.50/sample)

• EM ($45/sample)

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Some other coronaviruses

• Transmissible gastroenteritis and respiratory disease in pigs

• Infectious bronchitis in poultry• Feline enteric coronavirus (FEC) and

infectious peritonitis (FIP)• Ferret (catarrhal enteritis and FIP-like)• SARS coronavirus

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feline infectious peritonitis

M.C. Horzinek and H. LutzAn update on FIP

Veterinary Sience TomorrowJan, 2001

www.vetscite.org

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FIP

• fatal disease of young (3-18 mo), or very old in multi-cat houses or catteries

• not seen before 1950– new virus?– old virus, new disease

• systemic antibodies not protective, may even be harmful

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feline enteric coronavirus

• closely related to dog, pig (TGE), human coronaviruses– species specific but K9CV can infect cats

• two serotypes– serotype I

– more common, 70-95% of isolates, does not cross react with K9CV

– difficult to isolate

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FeCV, serotype 2

Both serotypes can lead to FIP causing strains

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epidemiology

• Exposure to FeCV– 25% of cats from 1-2 cat households are seropositive– 75-100% of cats from catteries seropositive

• susceptible cats become infected immediately following exposure

• kittens can become infected in utero or soon after maternal antibodies drop below protective levels

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epidemiology (FIP)

• 1:5,000 in 1-2 cat households• 1:20 in catteries

– sporadic– clustered (2-3 cats) - rare– rarely epidemic

• no gender or breed predisposition

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FIP pathogenesisFEC

Mild diarrhoeaor respiratory illness

persistent infection

virus immune system

low level of replication in epithelial and lymphoid cells

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pregnancy in young queens elective surgery

weaning, sale, shipment,adoption

concurrent infections (FeLV, FIV ?)

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Virus immunesystem

increased virus replication -> virulent mutants

increased ability to grow in macrophages

immune-mediated lysis of infected cells

cytokines draw in more susceptible cells

vascular permeability

immune complex related damage

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M.C. Horzinek and H. LutzAn update on FIPVeterinary Sience

TomorrowJan, 2001

www.vetscite.org

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clinical signs

• common signs– chronic antibiotic unresponsive fever– progressive anorexia, weight loss– stunting of growth

• blood abnormalities – progressive increase in serum proteins– increase in globulins– anemia– serum, urine brown due to bilirubin

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clinical signs

• “wet” form (poor cell-mediated immunity)

– peritonitis– pleuritis

• “dry” form (some CMI)• granulomas• enlarged lymph nodes• cloudiness in eye• neurological signs

• can change from dry to wet

Sharif et al. 2010. Vet Med Int

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diagnosis• RT-PCR for FeCoV• Serology (ELISA for anti FeCoV antibodies)

– prognosis?• no titre - no FIP but may still be infected• <100 - less chance of developing FIP• >100 - greater chance of getting FIP

• increased globulins and protein (>35g/L)• cytology

– degenerate and non-degenerate PMN, macrophages, some lymphocytes, protein background

– FeCV positive cells (FAT)

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control

• vaccine– Primucell FIP

• Intranasal ts virus

• management– early weaning and separation