Difference between revisions of "Caprine Arthritis Encephalitis Virus"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
====Pathogenesis==== | ====Pathogenesis==== | ||
*T cells induce immune complex disease | *T cells induce immune complex disease | ||
− | *Causes '''encephalitis of kids''' or [[ | + | *Causes '''encephalitis of kids''' or [[Infectious Arthritis#In Goats|'''insidious polyarthritis of adults''']] |
*Also causes pneumonia | *Also causes pneumonia | ||
Revision as of 16:30, 3 March 2011
This article is still under construction. |
CAEV
Antigenicity
- Serologically related to Visna-Maedi with antigenic and genetic envelope differences
Hosts
- Goats
Pathogenesis
- T cells induce immune complex disease
- Causes encephalitis of kids or insidious polyarthritis of adults
- Also causes pneumonia
Epidemiology
- Transfer via milk and colostrum, particularly batch-mixing
- Present in 10% of UK herds
- Clinical disease is rare
Diagnosis
- Visna-Maedi serology (ELISA) test can be used to remove positive stock
Control
- Separate kids from virus positive mothers at birth
- Treat mother's colostrum (56 deg for 1 hour)
- Rear on artificial milk
Caprine Arthritis-Encephalitis (CAE)
- Caused by retrovirus (lentivirus) similar to Maedi Visna in sheep described above
- Two forms:
- Non-suppurative leukoencephalomyelitis in young goats and kids
- Chronic, non-suppurative arthritis-synovitis in adult goats
- Also causes interstitial pneumonia which tends to be obscured by other clinical signs
- Gross pathology:
- Mainly caudal lobes
- Lungs are firm, grey-pink with grey-white focal lesions on cut surface
- Micro pathology:
- Thickened alveolar wall
- Lymphocyte infiltration and type II pneumocyte hyperplasia
- Can be confused with or coexisting with Parasitic pneumonia
- Arthritis is commonly the main expression
- Large limb joints are thickened
- Carpal hygroma is often present
- Subcutaneous cystic swelling on cranial surface of the knee, contains serous fluid
- In advanced cases
- Synovial villus hypertrophy
- Necrosis
- Mineralisation
- Mononuclear cell infiltration
- Pannus formation
- Articular cartilage destruction