Difference between revisions of "Category:Actinobacillus species"
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''[[Actinobacillus lignieresii]]'' | ''[[Actinobacillus lignieresii]]'' | ||
+ | ''[[Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae]]'' | ||
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===''Actinobacillus equuli''=== | ===''Actinobacillus equuli''=== |
Revision as of 11:17, 10 May 2010
Overview
- Mainly pathogens of farm animals
- Commensals of mucosa of upper respiratory tract and oral cavity
- Cannot survive long in the environment, therefore carrier animals are important in their transmission
- Cause granulomatous inflammation
Actinobacillus characteristics
- Small Gram negative coccobacilli
- Oxidase negative
- Do not grow on MacConkey
- Non-motile
- Facultative anaerobes which ferment carbohydrates to produce acid
Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae
Actinobacillus equuli
- Commensal of the equine intestinal and reproductive tract
- Pathogenesis and clinical signs:
- Foals infected in utero or or after birth via the umbilicus
- Infection at birth causes severe enteritis and septicaemia within 24 hours, known as sleepy foal disease
- Foals become pyrexic and recumbent
- Death usually occurs within 1-2 days
- In foals that survive neonatal infection the condition progresses to cause joint infections and purulent nephritis, enteritis or pneumonia
- A. equuli in arthritis of horses
- Abortion, septicaemia and peritonitis in horses
- Diagnosis:
- Specimens cultured on blood agar and MacConkey agar and incubated aerobically for 1-3 days
- Sticky colonies with variable haemolysis on blood agar
- Lactose-fermenting colonies on MacConkey agar
- Treatment and control:
- Antimicrobials ineffective unless early in course of disease
- Blood trasfusion and administration of colostrum
- Good hygiene
- Consider prophylactic antibiotics for new-born foals
- Bacteria susceptible to streptomycin, tetracyclines and ampicillin
- In other animals:
- Septicaemia in piglets
- Arthritis and enteritis in pigs
- Enteritis in calves
- RTX group cytotoxin present
Actinobacillus suis
- May be present in upper respiratory tract of sows
- Pathogenicity and clinical signs:
- Infection of piglets via aerosol or possibly skin abrasions
- Fatal septicaemia in piglets 1-8 weeks old
- Mortality up to 50% in some litters
- Fever, respiratory distress, prostration and paddling of forelimbs seen in piglets
- Petechial and ecchymotic haemorrhages in many organs
- Interstitial pneumonia, pleuritis, meningoencephalitis, myocarditis and arthritis
- Causes abscesses in joints and lungs of older pigs
- Carried in the nasopharynx of pigs and nose of horses
- Carriage may confer immunity to the more severe pleuropneumonia
- Diagnosis:
- Specimens cultured on blood agar and MacConkey agar for 1-3 days
- Sticky haemolytic colonies
- Pink, lactose-fermenting colonies on MacConkey agar
- Treatment and control:
- Bacteria usually susceptible to ampicillin, carbenicillin, potentiated sulphonamides and tetracyclines
- Disinfect contaminated pens
- Other animals:
- Septicaemia and pneumonia in foals
- Pneumonia in pigs and horses
Actinobacillus seminis
- Epididymitis in young rams (4-8 months)
- Polyarthritis in lambs
- Organism found in prepuce
- Opportunistic infection causing abscesses in epididymides
- May be purulent discharge onto scrotal skin
- Specimens cultured on blood agar and incubated aerobically for 1-3 days produce pin-point haemolytic colonies which are catalase-positive; no growth on MacConkey agar
Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans
- Epididymitis in rams
Pages in category "Actinobacillus species"
The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.