− | Early clinical signs may include subtle behavioural changes such as staring or fixed gaze, teeth grinding (bruxism), fine tremor, and hyperaesthesia to sound or sudden movements. Affected animals may later become intolerant to exercise and develop ataxia (awkwardness at turning, swaying of the hindquarters and some gait abnormalities such as a high stepping gait in the forelimbs or a bunny hopping gait in the hindlimbs). Some sheep have intense pruritis that leads to compulsive rubbing, nibbling at the skin, or scraping against fixed objects and may lead to wool loss (especially over the hindquarters and lateral thorax). A characteristic lip smacking or nibbling reflex can often be elicited by scratching over the lumbar region. In later stages there can be significant weight loss even without a noticeable decrease in appetite, weakness, recumbency, and death. <ref name="Bradley, 1997"> Bradley R, 1997. Animal prion diseases. In: Collinge J, Palmer MS, eds. Prion diseases. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 89-129.</ref>, <ref name="Dickinson, 1976"> Dickinson AG, 1976. Scrapie in sheep and goats. Frontiers in Biology, 44:209-241</ref>, <ref name="Kimberlin, 1981"> Kimberlin RH, 1981. Scrapie. British Medical Journal, 137:105-112.</ref>; <ref name="Palmer, 1976; "> Palmer AC, 1976. Scrapie. In: Palmer AC, ed. Introduction to animal neurology. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Scientific Publications, 177-178.</ref>, <ref name=" Parry and Oppenheimer, 1983" />. It is important to note that some scrapie-infected sheep may appear healthy until stressed by transport, shearing, or pregnancy <ref name="Detwiler and Baylis, 2003" />. | + | Early clinical signs may include subtle behavioural changes such as staring or fixed gaze, teeth grinding (bruxism), fine tremor, and hyperaesthesia to sound or sudden movements. Affected animals may later become intolerant to exercise and develop ataxia (awkwardness at turning, swaying of the hindquarters and some gait abnormalities such as a high stepping gait in the forelimbs or a bunny hopping gait in the hindlimbs). Some sheep have intense pruritis that leads to compulsive rubbing, nibbling at the skin, or scraping against fixed objects and may lead to wool loss (especially over the hindquarters and lateral thorax). A characteristic lip smacking or nibbling reflex can often be elicited by scratching over the lumbar region. In later stages there can be significant weight loss even without a noticeable decrease in appetite, weakness, recumbency, and death. <ref name="Bradley, 1997"> Bradley R, 1997. Animal prion diseases. In: Collinge J, Palmer MS, eds. Prion diseases. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 89-129.</ref>, <ref name="Dickinson, 1976"> Dickinson AG, 1976. Scrapie in sheep and goats. Frontiers in Biology, 44:209-241</ref>, <ref name="Kimberlin, 1981"> Kimberlin RH, 1981. Scrapie. British Medical Journal, 137:105-112.</ref>, <ref name="Palmer, 1976, "> Palmer AC, 1976. Scrapie. In: Palmer AC, ed. Introduction to animal neurology. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Scientific Publications, 177-178.</ref>, <ref name=" Parry and Oppenheimer, 1983" />. It is important to note that some scrapie-infected sheep may appear healthy until stressed by transport, shearing, or pregnancy <ref name="Detwiler and Baylis, 2003" />. |
− | PrPSc from post-mortem brainstem or lymphoid tissues may be detected by Western immunoblot analysis <ref name="Farquhar et al., 1989">Farquhar CF, Somerville RA, Ritchie LA, 1989. Post-mortem immunodiagnosis of scrapie and bovine spongiform encephalopathy. Journal of Virological Methods, 24(1, 2):215-222; 21 ref.</ref>; <ref name="Stack et al., 1996"> Stack MJ, Keyes P, Scott AC, 1996. The diagnosis of bovine spongiform encephalopathy and scrapie by the detection of fibrils and the abnormal protein isoform. In: Baker H, Ridley RM, eds. Methods in molecular medicine: prion diseases. Totowa, New Jersey, USA: Humana Press, 85-103.</ref>; <ref name="Wadsworth et al., 2001 "> Wadsworth JDF, Joiner S, Hill AF, Campbell TA, Desbruslais M, Luthert PJ, Collinge J, 2001. Tissue distribution of protease resistant prion protein in variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease using a highly sensitive immunoblotting assay. Lancet, 358(9277):171-180.</ref> and immunohistochemistry (IHC) <ref name="Miller et al., 1993; ">Miller JM, Jenny AL, Taylor WD, Marsh RF, Rubenstein R, Race RE, 1993. Immunohistochemical detection of prion protein in sheep with scrapie. Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation, 5(3):309-316; 38 ref.</ref> <ref name="Miller et al., 1994">Miller JM, Jenny AL, Taylor WD, Race RE, Ernst DR, Katz JB, Rubenstein R, 1994. Detection of prion protein in formalin-fixed brain by hydrated autoclaving immunohistochemistry for the diagnosis of scrapie in sheep. Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation, 6(3):366-368; 10 ref</ref>; <ref name="O'Rourke et al., 1998">O'Rourke KI, Baszler TV, Parish SM, Knowles DP, 1998. Preclinical detection of PrP in nictitating membrane lymphoid tissue of sheep. Veterinary Record, 142(18):489-491; 14 ref.</ref>; <ref name="Keulen et al., 1996; ">Keulen LJMvan, Schreuder BEC, Meloen RH, Mooij-Harkes G, Vromans MEW, Langeveld JPM, 1996. Immunohistochemical detection of prion protein in lymphoid tissues of sheep with natural scrapie. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 34(5):1228-1231; 26 ref.</ref>, <ref name="Keulen et al., 1995">Keulen LJMvan, Schreuder BEC, Meloen RH, Berg MPvan den, Mooij-Harkes G, Vromans MEW, Langeveld JPM, 1995. Immunohistochemical detection and localization of prion protein in brain tissue of sheep with natural scrapie. Veterinary Pathology, 32(3):299-308; 35 ref.</ref> . Transmission to mice by injecting suspect tissue can be used to assay infectivity <ref name="OIE, 2000 " />tonsil <ref name="Schreuder et al., 1998">Schreuder BEC, Keulen LJMvan, Vromans MEW, Langeveld JPM, Smits MA, 1998. Tonsillar biopsy and PrP detection in the preclinical diagnosis of scrapie. Veterinary Record, 142(21):564-568; 31 ref. </ref>; <ref name="Schreuder et al., 1996 ">Schreuder BEC, Keulen LJMvan, Vromans MEW, Langeveld JPM, Smits MA, 1996. Preclinical test for prion diseases. Nature (London), 381(6583):563; 10 ref.</ref> and lymphoid biopsies <ref name=" Bender et al., 2004"> Bender S, Alverson J, Herrmann LM, O’Rourke KI, 2004. Histamine as an aid to biopsy of third eyelid lymphoid tissue in sheep. Veterinary Record, 154(21):662-663.</ref>; <ref name="Ikegami et al., 1991">Ikegami Y, Ito M, Isomura H, Momotani E, Sasaki K, Muramatsu Y, Ishiguro N, Shinagawa M, 1991. Pre-clinical and clinical diagnosis of scrapie by detection of PrP protein in tissues of sheep. Veterinary Record, 128(12):271-275; 16 ref.</ref>; <ref name="O'Rourke et al., 2000">O'Rourke KI, Baszler TV, Besser TE, Miller JM, Cutlip RC, Wells GAH, Ryder SJ, Parish SM, Hamir AN, Cockett NE, Jenny A, Knowles DP, 2000. Preclinical diagnosis of scrapie by immunohistochemistry of third eyelid lymphoid tissue. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 38(9):3254-3259; 33 ref.</ref>; <ref name="O'Rourke et al., 1998">O'Rourke KI, Baszler TV, Miller JM, Spraker TR, Sadler-Riggleman I, Knowles DP, 1998. Monoclonal antibody F89/160.1.5 defines a conserved epitope on the ruminant prion protein. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 36(6):1750-1755; 41 ref. </ref>; <ref name="Thuring et al., 2000 ">Thuring CMA, Sweeney T, McElroy MC, Weavers E, 2000. Suitability of protuberances on the third eyelids of sheep as a biopsy site for lymphoid follicles. Veterinary Record, 147(22):631-632; 10 ref.</ref> stained for PrP<sup>sc</sup> by using IHC have been used for preclinical scrapie screening .
| + | PrP<sup>Sc</sup> from post-mortem brainstem or lymphoid tissues may be detected by Western immunoblot analysis <ref name="Farquhar et al., 1989">Farquhar CF, Somerville RA, Ritchie LA, 1989. Post-mortem immunodiagnosis of scrapie and bovine spongiform encephalopathy. Journal of Virological Methods, 24(1, 2):215-222; 21 ref.</ref>, <ref name="Stack et al., 1996"> Stack MJ, Keyes P, Scott AC, 1996. The diagnosis of bovine spongiform encephalopathy and scrapie by the detection of fibrils and the abnormal protein isoform. In: Baker H, Ridley RM, eds. Methods in molecular medicine: prion diseases. Totowa, New Jersey, USA: Humana Press, 85-103.</ref>, <ref name="Wadsworth et al., 2001 "> Wadsworth JDF, Joiner S, Hill AF, Campbell TA, Desbruslais M, Luthert PJ, Collinge J, 2001. Tissue distribution of protease resistant prion protein in variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease using a highly sensitive immunoblotting assay. Lancet, 358(9277):171-180.</ref> and immunohistochemistry (IHC) <ref name="Miller et al., 1993">Miller JM, Jenny AL, Taylor WD, Marsh RF, Rubenstein R, Race RE, 1993. Immunohistochemical detection of prion protein in sheep with scrapie. Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation, 5(3):309-316; 38 ref.</ref>, <ref name="Miller et al., 1994">Miller JM, Jenny AL, Taylor WD, Race RE, Ernst DR, Katz JB, Rubenstein R, 1994. Detection of prion protein in formalin-fixed brain by hydrated autoclaving immunohistochemistry for the diagnosis of scrapie in sheep. Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation, 6(3):366-368; 10 ref</ref>, <ref name="O'Rourke et al., 1998">O'Rourke KI, Baszler TV, Parish SM, Knowles DP, 1998. Preclinical detection of PrP in nictitating membrane lymphoid tissue of sheep. Veterinary Record, 142(18):489-491; 14 ref.</ref>, <ref name="Keulen et al., 1996; ">Keulen LJMvan, Schreuder BEC, Meloen RH, Mooij-Harkes G, Vromans MEW, Langeveld JPM, 1996. Immunohistochemical detection of prion protein in lymphoid tissues of sheep with natural scrapie. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 34(5):1228-1231; 26 ref.</ref>, <ref name="Keulen et al., 1995">Keulen LJMvan, Schreuder BEC, Meloen RH, Berg MPvan den, Mooij-Harkes G, Vromans MEW, Langeveld JPM, 1995. Immunohistochemical detection and localization of prion protein in brain tissue of sheep with natural scrapie. Veterinary Pathology, 32(3):299-308; 35 ref.</ref>. Transmission to mice by injecting suspect tissue can be used to assay infectivity <ref name="OIE, 2000 " />tonsil <ref name="Schreuder et al., 1998">Schreuder BEC, Keulen LJMvan, Vromans MEW, Langeveld JPM, Smits MA, 1998. Tonsillar biopsy and PrP detection in the preclinical diagnosis of scrapie. Veterinary Record, 142(21):564-568; 31 ref. </ref>, <ref name="Schreuder et al., 1996 ">Schreuder BEC, Keulen LJMvan, Vromans MEW, Langeveld JPM, Smits MA, 1996. Preclinical test for prion diseases. Nature (London), 381(6583):563; 10 ref.</ref> and lymphoid biopsies <ref name=" Bender et al., 2004"> Bender S, Alverson J, Herrmann LM, O’Rourke KI, 2004. Histamine as an aid to biopsy of third eyelid lymphoid tissue in sheep. Veterinary Record, 154(21):662-663.</ref>, <ref name="Ikegami et al., 1991">Ikegami Y, Ito M, Isomura H, Momotani E, Sasaki K, Muramatsu Y, Ishiguro N, Shinagawa M, 1991. Pre-clinical and clinical diagnosis of scrapie by detection of PrP protein in tissues of sheep. Veterinary Record, 128(12):271-275; 16 ref.</ref>, <ref name="O'Rourke et al., 2000">O'Rourke KI, Baszler TV, Besser TE, Miller JM, Cutlip RC, Wells GAH, Ryder SJ, Parish SM, Hamir AN, Cockett NE, Jenny A, Knowles DP, 2000. Preclinical diagnosis of scrapie by immunohistochemistry of third eyelid lymphoid tissue. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 38(9):3254-3259; 33 ref.</ref>, <ref name="O'Rourke et al., 1998">O'Rourke KI, Baszler TV, Miller JM, Spraker TR, Sadler-Riggleman I, Knowles DP, 1998. Monoclonal antibody F89/160.1.5 defines a conserved epitope on the ruminant prion protein. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 36(6):1750-1755; 41 ref. </ref>, <ref name="Thuring et al., 2000 ">Thuring CMA, Sweeney T, McElroy MC, Weavers E, 2000. Suitability of protuberances on the third eyelids of sheep as a biopsy site for lymphoid follicles. Veterinary Record, 147(22):631-632; 10 ref.</ref> stained for PrP<sup>sc</sup> by using IHC have been used for preclinical scrapie screening . |