Subacute Rumenal Acidosis
- Like bloat, rumenal acidosis is associated with mismanagement of feeding and involves cessation or depression of rumenal movements with development of a degree of tympany.
- More common in cattle and goats than in sheep due to differences in diet.
Clinical
- Animals display signs of abdominal discomfort, but usually recover if treated.
- Acute disease can result in death if acidosis is severe.
Pathogenesis
- Occurs following feeding of highly fermentable material, usually carbohydrate, in the form of concentrate or cereal
- e.g. in barley beef feeding systems.
- An overgrowth of Gram positive bacteria results, breaking carbohydrate down very quickly.
- Increased volatile fatty acid production decreases the rumen pH to about 5.
- Normal flora may invade the damaged wall of rumen e.g. Fusiformis necrophorum.
- Results in areas with mushy necrotic papillae.
- Especially on pillars and ventral parts of rumen.
- Excess gas production may occur
- Concentrate does not contain soluble proteins, therefore foam does not develop.
- Only mild to moderate free gas bloat is likely- much of the rumenal distension which occurs with rumenal acidosis is due to fluid sequestration in the rumen.
Pathology
Gross
- Gross PM findings may be non-specific.
- Ruminal stasis/bloat leads to rumen distension
- Rumen contents are porridge-like.
- Rumenitis may be present
- Normal flora invading wall of rumen may enter blood as thromboemboli and travel in the portal flow to liver
- Focal abscesses are produced, which heal with sunken star-shaped scars.
- Overgrowth of Clostridia may cause endotoxic shock with widespread petechial haemorrhages.
Histological
- Microvesicles may be present in the epithelium of the rumen papillae.
- Contain mainly neutrophils
- May be focal erosions/ulceration.
Sequelae
- Scarring- necrotised papillae are replaced by smooth epithelium closely adherent to sub mucosa.
- Has economic significance since many barley beef livers are condemned at meat inspection.
- More persistent organisms can invade rumen wall producing chronic infection.
- These are often fungi, e.g. Mucor (see Mucormycosis).