Difference between revisions of "Muscles Inflammatory - Pathology"
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| − | # | + | {{review}} |
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| + | {{toplink | ||
| + | |backcolour =CDE472 | ||
| + | |linkpage =Musculoskeletal System - Pathology | ||
| + | |linktext =Musculoskeletal System | ||
| + | |maplink = Musculoskeletal System (Content Map) - Pathology | ||
| + | |pagetype =Pathology | ||
| + | |sublink1=Muscles - Pathology | ||
| + | |subtext1=MUSCLES | ||
| + | }} | ||
| + | <br> | ||
| + | ==Myositis== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Inflammation of muscle | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ===Bacterial myositis=== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Bacteria gain entry via: | ||
| + | **Direct penetration | ||
| + | **Blood stream | ||
| + | **Extension | ||
| + | *Lesions caused: | ||
| + | **Suppurative | ||
| + | **Serosanguinous | ||
| + | **Granulomatous | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====Abscesses==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Caused by pyogenic bacteria | ||
| + | *Usually: | ||
| + | **[[Arcanobacter pyogenes|''Arcanobacterium pyogenes'']] in sheep and cattle | ||
| + | **[[Respiratory Bacterial Infections - Pathology#Strangles|''Streptococcus equi'']] in horses | ||
| + | **[[Corynebacterium species|''Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis'']] in sheep and goats | ||
| + | **[[Pasteurella species and Mannheimia haemolytica|''Pasteurella multocida'']] causes cellulitis in cats | ||
| + | *Usually localised suppuration and necrosis of myofibres | ||
| + | *Occasionally my spread via the fascia | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====Black leg==== | ||
| + | [[Image:Black leg myositis.jpg|right|thumb|100px|<small><center>Blackleg myositis (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)</center></small>]] | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Causative agent: ''[[Clostridium chauvoei]]'' | ||
| + | *May affect the fattest cattle at pasture in the summer | ||
| + | *Rapid toxaemia -> death | ||
| + | *If clinical signs observed: | ||
| + | **Toxaemia -> pyrexia, depression, [[Lungs Circulatory - Pathology#Pulmonary oedema|pulmonary oedema]], circulatory collapse | ||
| + | **Muscle lesions -> lameness, swollen hot muscles later becoming cool as necrosis sets in | ||
| + | *Pathogenesis: | ||
| + | **Spores gain entry to GI tract -> blood -> muscle -> lie latent | ||
| + | **Under right conditions (usually anaerobic following injury) they germinate and bacilli grow | ||
| + | **Toxin damages capillaries -> serosanguinous exudate | ||
| + | **Muscle necrosis due to gas producing bacteria -> emphysaema and crepitus | ||
| + | *Grossly: | ||
| + | **Early stages | ||
| + | ***At muscle periphery | ||
| + | ***Dark red | ||
| + | ***Distended by serous or serosanguinous exudate | ||
| + | ***Wet cut surface | ||
| + | **Old stages | ||
| + | ***Centre of lesion is full of gas bubbles, porous, dry, reddish black | ||
| + | ***Rancid odour | ||
| + | *Histologically: | ||
| + | **Early stages | ||
| + | ***Separation of myofibres by exudate | ||
| + | ***[[Necrosis - Pathology#Coagulation Necrosis|Coagulative necrosis]] | ||
| + | ***No nuclei | ||
| + | **Old stage | ||
| + | ***Fragmented muscle fibres separated by gas bubbles | ||
| + | ***Gram positive bacilli may be found in clumps | ||
| + | |||
| + | ====[[Necrosis - Pathology#Gas Gangrene|Gas gangrene]]==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Causative agents: [[:Category:Clostridium species|''Clostridium septicum, C. novyi, C. perfringens, C. sordelli'']] | ||
| + | *Normally in soil | ||
| + | *Bacteria gain entry as spores via penetrating wounds | ||
| + | *Serohaemorrhagic myositis | ||
| + | *If only subcutis and fascia are involved - '''malignant oedema''' | ||
| + | *Toxaemia and septicaemia -> rapid death | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====[[Tongue - Pathology#Actinobacillosis|Wooden tongue]]==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Also called '''Actinobacillosis''' | ||
| + | *Caused by ''[[Actinobacillus lignieresii]]'' | ||
| + | *Usually due to direct penetration into tongue of cattle | ||
| + | *Small granulomatous lesions containing 'sulfa granules' of large numbers of gram-negative rods | ||
| + | |||
| + | ====Tuberculosis==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Caused by [[Mycobacteria spp.|''Mycobacterium bovis'']] | ||
| + | *Grossly: | ||
| + | **Yellowish spherical nodules | ||
| + | **[[Necrosis - Pathology#Caseation Necrosis|Caseous content]] | ||
| + | **Fibrous capsule usually | ||
| + | *Histologically: | ||
| + | **Granuloma | ||
| + | **Central necrosis | ||
| + | **Epitheliod and giant cells at periphery | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====''[[Actinomyces bovis]]''==== | ||
| + | *"Lumpy jaw" | ||
| + | *May extend to muscles, especially masseters, from [[Bones Inflammatory - Pathology#Osteomyelitis|osteomyelitis]] | ||
| + | *Histologically: | ||
| + | **Caseous or suppurative centres of lesions | ||
| + | **Epithelioid and giant cells at periphery | ||
| + | **'Sulfa granules' at centre - gram-positive branching rods | ||
| + | |||
| + | ====Botryomycosis==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Caused by [[Staphylococcus spp.|''Staphylococcus aureus'']] | ||
| + | *Occurs in horses and pigs usually due to wounds | ||
| + | *Lowgrade persistent infection -> granulomatous lesions | ||
| + | *Grossly: | ||
| + | **Hard nodules with fibrous capsule in muscles | ||
| + | **Contain yellow-brown pus and granules | ||
| + | *Histologically: | ||
| + | **Encapsulated granulomatous lesions | ||
| + | **Central club colonies | ||
| + | **Staphylococci are present | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ===Viral myositis=== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Rare in the UK | ||
| + | |||
| + | ====Porcine encephalomyelitis==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Caused by [[Coronaviridae|Coronavirus]] | ||
| + | *May cause multifocal myofibre necrosis + focal interstitial and perivascular lymphocyte, macrophage and neutrophil infiltration | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====Foot and Mouth disease==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Caused by [[Picornaviridae|Apthovirus]] | ||
| + | *Main presentation are vesicles | ||
| + | *May also involve skeletal and heart muscle | ||
| + | *Grossly: | ||
| + | **Yellow streaks and grey foci | ||
| + | *Histologically: | ||
| + | **Segmental myofibre [[Muscles Degenerative - Pathology#Necrosis|necrosis]] | ||
| + | **Infiltration of lymphocytes and [[Neutrophils - WikiBlood|neutrophils]] | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====Bluetongue==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Caused by [[Reoviridae|bluetongue virus of family Reoviridae]] | ||
| + | *Non-contagious | ||
| + | *Insect-borne | ||
| + | *Causes vasculitis, especially in oral cavity | ||
| + | *Grossly: | ||
| + | **Infarctions -> necrosis | ||
| + | **Haemorrhage | ||
| + | *Histologically: | ||
| + | **Necrosis -> calcification or regeneration (depends on age of lesion) | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ===Parasitic myositis=== | ||
| + | [[Image:taenia ovis cysticerci.jpg|right|thumb|100px|<small><center>''T. ovis'' cysticerci (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)</center></small>]] | ||
| + | [[Image:Sarcocyst in muscle.jpg|right|thumb|100px|<small><center>Sarcocyst (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)</center></small>]] | ||
| + | *Rare in domestic animals | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====Nematodes==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *[[Trichinelloidea|'''''Trichinella''''']] larvae | ||
| + | **Particularly in pigs and dogs | ||
| + | **Public health and economic importance | ||
| + | **''T. spiralis'' affecting dogs, pigs, cats and humans is most common in hotter climates | ||
| + | **Larvae distend myofibres | ||
| + | **May be seen grossly if dead and calcified | ||
| + | **Predilection for active muscles, ''e.g.'' diaphragm, intercostal, masseter and tongue muscles | ||
| + | **Histologically: | ||
| + | ***Focal myositis - [[Neutrophils - WikiBlood|neutrophils]], lymphocytes, eosinophils | ||
| + | |||
| + | *[[Ancylostomatoidea|''Ancylostoma'']] larvae | ||
| + | **Cause inflammation and [[Muscles Degenerative - Pathology#Necrosis|necrosis]] | ||
| + | *[[Ascaridoidea|Ascarid]] larvae | ||
| + | *[[Dirofilaria immitis|''Dirofilaria immitis'']] in dogs causing ischaemic myopathy due to [[Muscles Degenerative - Pathology#Ischaemia|infartcs]] | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====Cestodes==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *[[Taenia|''Taenia solium, '']] - cysticercosis in swine and humans | ||
| + | *[[Taenia|''T. ovis'']] - cysticercosis in sheep | ||
| + | *[[Taenia|''T. saginata'']] in cattle cysticercosis | ||
| + | *[[Taenia|''Multiceps serialis'']] in rabbits, primates coenurosis | ||
| + | *[[Echinococcus|''Echinococcus granulosus'']] hydatid disease in herbivores and humans | ||
| + | |||
| + | ====Protozoa==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *[[Toxoplasma|'''''Toxoplasma gondii''''']] | ||
| + | **Cats as final hosts | ||
| + | **Intermediate hosts, birds and mammals have tachyzoites throughout body, infrequently in skeletal muscle | ||
| + | **Histologically: | ||
| + | ***Multifocal [[Muscles Degenerative - Pathology#Necrosis|necrosis]] of myofibres | ||
| + | ***Lymphocyte and plasma cell infiltration | ||
| + | ***In later stages bradyzoite cysts | ||
| + | *[[Neospora|'''''Neospora caninum''''']] | ||
| + | **Necrotising inflammation of muscles | ||
| + | **Myositis more severe than in toxoplasmosis | ||
| + | *[[Sarcocystis|'''''Sarcocystis''''']] | ||
| + | **Histologically: | ||
| + | ***Merozoites causing focal and segmental [[Muscles Degenerative - Pathology#Necrosis|necrosis]] | ||
| + | ***May involve [[Muscles Degenerative - Pathology#Calcification|mineralisation]] | ||
| + | ***Non-purulent myositis with plasma cells, lymphocytes and macrophages | ||
| + | **Diaphragm and masseters most severely affected | ||
| + | *[[Bones Hyperplastic and Neoplastic - Pathology#Hepatozoon|'''''Hepatozoon americanum''''']] | ||
| + | **Develop cysts in skeletal muscle of dogs and cats | ||
| + | **May be accompanied by pyogranulomatous myositis - macrophages and [[Neutrophils - WikiBlood|neutrophils]] mainly with occasional other cells | ||
| + | *'''''Trypanosoma''''' | ||
| + | **Infrequent muscle lesions with mononuclear infiltrates | ||
| + | **Dogs, cats and pigs are affected | ||
| + | **Parasites lie between myofilaments | ||
| + | **May cause fibre degeneration | ||
| + | *'''''Babesia bovis''''' | ||
| + | **In cattle | ||
| + | **Infrequent muscle [[Muscles Degenerative - Pathology#Necrosis|necrosis]] | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====Arthropods==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Dipterious larvae causing myiasis | ||
| + | *[[Insecta|''Hypoderma'' spp.]] in cattle | ||
| + | **May occasionally burrow into muscle | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ===Immune-mediated myositis=== | ||
| + | |||
| + | ====Masticatory muscle myositis (MMM)==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Occurs in dogs | ||
| + | *Tends to affect the masseter and temporalis muscles | ||
| + | *Autoantibodies selectively attack muscles of mastication (type IIM fibres) | ||
| + | *Acute stage = eosinophilic myositis | ||
| + | **Extremely swollen, painful, hard masticatory muscles | ||
| + | *Chronic stage = atrophic myositis | ||
| + | **Atrophy may occur without previous acute stage | ||
| + | *Grossly: | ||
| + | **Bilateral but not necessarily symmetrical | ||
| + | **At first, enlarged and oedematous muscles becominf dark red, firm with reddish streaks and yellowiss foci | ||
| + | *Histologically: | ||
| + | **Acute lesions: | ||
| + | ***Mainly eosinophilic infiltrate, few lymphocytes, [[Monocytes - WikiBlood|monocytes]] and plasma cells | ||
| + | ***In recurrent disease plasma cells predominate | ||
| + | ***[[Muscles Degenerative - Pathology#Necrosis|Necrotic]] myofibres, [[Muscles Degenerative - Pathology#Atrophy|atrophy]] and attempted [[Muscle Regeneration - Anatomy & Physiology|regeneration]] | ||
| + | **Chronic stage: | ||
| + | ***[[Muscles Degenerative - Pathology#Atrophy|Atrophy]] predominates | ||
| + | ***Fasciculi are shrunken | ||
| + | ***Condensation of stroma -> enlarged endomysium | ||
| + | ***Focal plasma cell and lymphocyte infiltration | ||
| + | |||
| + | ====[[Muscles Developmental - Pathology#Canine dermatomyositis|Canine dermatomyositis]]==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ===Idiopathic myositis=== | ||
| + | |||
| + | ====Canine polymyositis==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *DOES NOT include MMM above | ||
| + | *Rare | ||
| + | *Clinical signs: | ||
| + | **Muscle pain | ||
| + | **Fever | ||
| + | **Weakness, particularly in hind limbs | ||
| + | *Grossly: | ||
| + | **Inflammation is accompanied by muscle necrosis and regeneration | ||
| + | *Histologically: | ||
| + | **Inflammatory foci with lymphocytes, plasma cells and occasionally eosinophils | ||
| + | *Possibly immunological cause | ||
| + | *Single biopsy may not be enough to make the diagnosis as it tends to be multifocal and disseminated | ||
| + | *Lesions similar to some infectious causes (such as [[Toxoplasma|''Toxoplasma gondii'']]) | ||
| + | |||
| + | ====Canine bilateral extraocular polymyositis==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *In Golden retrievers | ||
| + | *Very rare | ||
| + | *Clinical signs: | ||
| + | **Acute bilateral exophthalmos | ||
| + | *Involves only extraocular muscles except for retractor blbi | ||
| + | *Grossly: | ||
| + | **Swollen and pale extraocular muscles | ||
| + | *Histologically: | ||
| + | **Sterile myositis | ||
| + | **Multifocal necrosis of myofibres | ||
| + | **Lymphocytic, histiocytic and plasmacytic infiltrate with few [[Neutrophils - WikiBlood|neutrophils]] | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ====Bovine and ovine eosinophilic myositis==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | *Unknown aetiology | ||
| + | *Major cell involved is eosinphil | ||
| + | *Usually noticed at slaughter - green muscle discoloration | ||
| + | *May be caused by degenteration of [[Sarcocystis|''Sarcocystis'' spp.]] | ||
| + | *Grossly: | ||
| + | **Green discolored areas, well demarcated | ||
| + | **Mostly in muscles of back and thighs | ||
| + | *Histologically: | ||
| + | **Massive eosinophil infiltration | ||
| + | **Muscle fibres may degenerate | ||
| + | **In old lesions - endimysial fibrosis, myofibre atrophy, some regeneration, lymphocytes, plasma cells, macrophages and few eosinophils | ||
| + | **Capsule may form | ||
Revision as of 11:33, 12 May 2010
| This article has been peer reviewed but is awaiting expert review. If you would like to help with this, please see more information about expert reviewing. |
|
|
Myositis
- Inflammation of muscle
Bacterial myositis
- Bacteria gain entry via:
- Direct penetration
- Blood stream
- Extension
- Lesions caused:
- Suppurative
- Serosanguinous
- Granulomatous
Abscesses
- Caused by pyogenic bacteria
- Usually:
- Arcanobacterium pyogenes in sheep and cattle
- Streptococcus equi in horses
- Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis in sheep and goats
- Pasteurella multocida causes cellulitis in cats
- Usually localised suppuration and necrosis of myofibres
- Occasionally my spread via the fascia
Black leg
- Causative agent: Clostridium chauvoei
- May affect the fattest cattle at pasture in the summer
- Rapid toxaemia -> death
- If clinical signs observed:
- Toxaemia -> pyrexia, depression, pulmonary oedema, circulatory collapse
- Muscle lesions -> lameness, swollen hot muscles later becoming cool as necrosis sets in
- Pathogenesis:
- Spores gain entry to GI tract -> blood -> muscle -> lie latent
- Under right conditions (usually anaerobic following injury) they germinate and bacilli grow
- Toxin damages capillaries -> serosanguinous exudate
- Muscle necrosis due to gas producing bacteria -> emphysaema and crepitus
- Grossly:
- Early stages
- At muscle periphery
- Dark red
- Distended by serous or serosanguinous exudate
- Wet cut surface
- Old stages
- Centre of lesion is full of gas bubbles, porous, dry, reddish black
- Rancid odour
- Early stages
- Histologically:
- Early stages
- Separation of myofibres by exudate
- Coagulative necrosis
- No nuclei
- Old stage
- Fragmented muscle fibres separated by gas bubbles
- Gram positive bacilli may be found in clumps
- Early stages
Gas gangrene
- Causative agents: Clostridium septicum, C. novyi, C. perfringens, C. sordelli
- Normally in soil
- Bacteria gain entry as spores via penetrating wounds
- Serohaemorrhagic myositis
- If only subcutis and fascia are involved - malignant oedema
- Toxaemia and septicaemia -> rapid death
Wooden tongue
- Also called Actinobacillosis
- Caused by Actinobacillus lignieresii
- Usually due to direct penetration into tongue of cattle
- Small granulomatous lesions containing 'sulfa granules' of large numbers of gram-negative rods
Tuberculosis
- Caused by Mycobacterium bovis
- Grossly:
- Yellowish spherical nodules
- Caseous content
- Fibrous capsule usually
- Histologically:
- Granuloma
- Central necrosis
- Epitheliod and giant cells at periphery
Actinomyces bovis
- "Lumpy jaw"
- May extend to muscles, especially masseters, from osteomyelitis
- Histologically:
- Caseous or suppurative centres of lesions
- Epithelioid and giant cells at periphery
- 'Sulfa granules' at centre - gram-positive branching rods
Botryomycosis
- Caused by Staphylococcus aureus
- Occurs in horses and pigs usually due to wounds
- Lowgrade persistent infection -> granulomatous lesions
- Grossly:
- Hard nodules with fibrous capsule in muscles
- Contain yellow-brown pus and granules
- Histologically:
- Encapsulated granulomatous lesions
- Central club colonies
- Staphylococci are present
Viral myositis
- Rare in the UK
Porcine encephalomyelitis
- Caused by Coronavirus
- May cause multifocal myofibre necrosis + focal interstitial and perivascular lymphocyte, macrophage and neutrophil infiltration
Foot and Mouth disease
- Caused by Apthovirus
- Main presentation are vesicles
- May also involve skeletal and heart muscle
- Grossly:
- Yellow streaks and grey foci
- Histologically:
- Segmental myofibre necrosis
- Infiltration of lymphocytes and neutrophils
Bluetongue
- Caused by bluetongue virus of family Reoviridae
- Non-contagious
- Insect-borne
- Causes vasculitis, especially in oral cavity
- Grossly:
- Infarctions -> necrosis
- Haemorrhage
- Histologically:
- Necrosis -> calcification or regeneration (depends on age of lesion)
Parasitic myositis
- Rare in domestic animals
Nematodes
- Trichinella larvae
- Particularly in pigs and dogs
- Public health and economic importance
- T. spiralis affecting dogs, pigs, cats and humans is most common in hotter climates
- Larvae distend myofibres
- May be seen grossly if dead and calcified
- Predilection for active muscles, e.g. diaphragm, intercostal, masseter and tongue muscles
- Histologically:
- Focal myositis - neutrophils, lymphocytes, eosinophils
- Ancylostoma larvae
- Cause inflammation and necrosis
- Ascarid larvae
- Dirofilaria immitis in dogs causing ischaemic myopathy due to infartcs
Cestodes
- Taenia solium, - cysticercosis in swine and humans
- T. ovis - cysticercosis in sheep
- T. saginata in cattle cysticercosis
- Multiceps serialis in rabbits, primates coenurosis
- Echinococcus granulosus hydatid disease in herbivores and humans
Protozoa
- Toxoplasma gondii
- Cats as final hosts
- Intermediate hosts, birds and mammals have tachyzoites throughout body, infrequently in skeletal muscle
- Histologically:
- Multifocal necrosis of myofibres
- Lymphocyte and plasma cell infiltration
- In later stages bradyzoite cysts
- Neospora caninum
- Necrotising inflammation of muscles
- Myositis more severe than in toxoplasmosis
- Sarcocystis
- Histologically:
- Merozoites causing focal and segmental necrosis
- May involve mineralisation
- Non-purulent myositis with plasma cells, lymphocytes and macrophages
- Diaphragm and masseters most severely affected
- Histologically:
- Hepatozoon americanum
- Develop cysts in skeletal muscle of dogs and cats
- May be accompanied by pyogranulomatous myositis - macrophages and neutrophils mainly with occasional other cells
- Trypanosoma
- Infrequent muscle lesions with mononuclear infiltrates
- Dogs, cats and pigs are affected
- Parasites lie between myofilaments
- May cause fibre degeneration
- Babesia bovis
- In cattle
- Infrequent muscle necrosis
Arthropods
- Dipterious larvae causing myiasis
- Hypoderma spp. in cattle
- May occasionally burrow into muscle
Immune-mediated myositis
Masticatory muscle myositis (MMM)
- Occurs in dogs
- Tends to affect the masseter and temporalis muscles
- Autoantibodies selectively attack muscles of mastication (type IIM fibres)
- Acute stage = eosinophilic myositis
- Extremely swollen, painful, hard masticatory muscles
- Chronic stage = atrophic myositis
- Atrophy may occur without previous acute stage
- Grossly:
- Bilateral but not necessarily symmetrical
- At first, enlarged and oedematous muscles becominf dark red, firm with reddish streaks and yellowiss foci
- Histologically:
- Acute lesions:
- Mainly eosinophilic infiltrate, few lymphocytes, monocytes and plasma cells
- In recurrent disease plasma cells predominate
- Necrotic myofibres, atrophy and attempted regeneration
- Chronic stage:
- Atrophy predominates
- Fasciculi are shrunken
- Condensation of stroma -> enlarged endomysium
- Focal plasma cell and lymphocyte infiltration
- Acute lesions:
Canine dermatomyositis
Idiopathic myositis
Canine polymyositis
- DOES NOT include MMM above
- Rare
- Clinical signs:
- Muscle pain
- Fever
- Weakness, particularly in hind limbs
- Grossly:
- Inflammation is accompanied by muscle necrosis and regeneration
- Histologically:
- Inflammatory foci with lymphocytes, plasma cells and occasionally eosinophils
- Possibly immunological cause
- Single biopsy may not be enough to make the diagnosis as it tends to be multifocal and disseminated
- Lesions similar to some infectious causes (such as Toxoplasma gondii)
Canine bilateral extraocular polymyositis
- In Golden retrievers
- Very rare
- Clinical signs:
- Acute bilateral exophthalmos
- Involves only extraocular muscles except for retractor blbi
- Grossly:
- Swollen and pale extraocular muscles
- Histologically:
- Sterile myositis
- Multifocal necrosis of myofibres
- Lymphocytic, histiocytic and plasmacytic infiltrate with few neutrophils
Bovine and ovine eosinophilic myositis
- Unknown aetiology
- Major cell involved is eosinphil
- Usually noticed at slaughter - green muscle discoloration
- May be caused by degenteration of Sarcocystis spp.
- Grossly:
- Green discolored areas, well demarcated
- Mostly in muscles of back and thighs
- Histologically:
- Massive eosinophil infiltration
- Muscle fibres may degenerate
- In old lesions - endimysial fibrosis, myofibre atrophy, some regeneration, lymphocytes, plasma cells, macrophages and few eosinophils
- Capsule may form