Difference between revisions of "Category:Oral Cavity - Vesicular Pathology"

From WikiVet English
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 19: Line 19:
 
#Ingestion of hot food (corrosive liquids)
 
#Ingestion of hot food (corrosive liquids)
 
#Systemic viral diseases. ''e.g'':
 
#Systemic viral diseases. ''e.g'':
##[[Foot and Mouth Disease Virus|Foot and Mouth disease]] - ruminants and pigs
+
##[[Foot and Mouth Disease|Foot and Mouth disease]] - ruminants and pigs
 
##[[Vesicular stomatitis]] - horse, pigs, cattle
 
##[[Vesicular stomatitis]] - horse, pigs, cattle
 
##[[Vesicular exanthema]] - pigs  
 
##[[Vesicular exanthema]] - pigs  
Line 30: Line 30:
 
===[[Swine Vesicular Disease]]===
 
===[[Swine Vesicular Disease]]===
  
===Vesicles in dogs===
+
===[[Oral Vesicles in Dogs]]===
*Vesicles in mouth are often caused by hot food - especially in dogs. 
 
*Can produce quite big vesicles, but will heal. 
 
*No major problems associated with vesicles on [[Oral Cavity - Tongue - Anatomy & Physiology|tongue]] in dogs (except if due to drinking battery acid, but this also produces vomiting).
 
  
  

Revision as of 12:22, 25 May 2010


Pathology

  • Damage to prickle cells (stratum spinosum).
  • Appears as accumulation of fluid within epithelium, quickly erodes leaving hyperaemic stratum germinativum.
  • Heals by proliferation of new cells, so long as infection does not continue.

Pathogenesis

May be caused by:

  1. Ingestion of hot food (corrosive liquids)
  2. Systemic viral diseases. e.g:
    1. Foot and Mouth disease - ruminants and pigs
    2. Vesicular stomatitis - horse, pigs, cattle
    3. Vesicular exanthema - pigs

N.B. All are indistinguishable from FMD clinically.

Foot and Mouth Disease (FMDV)

Swine Vesicular Disease

Oral Vesicles in Dogs

Pages in category "Oral Cavity - Vesicular Pathology"

The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.