Scrapie in Sheep Flashcards
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Question | Answer | Article | |
What is a prion (PrP)? | A prion (PrP) is a protein that occurs normally in the nervous and lymphoreticular tissues. When it changes conformation (PrPsc/PrPRes) it becomes an infectious agent and causes degeneration of neurological tissue. |
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What species are affected by scrapie? |
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Is scrapies a zoonosis? | Unlike BSE there is no evidence to prove that scrapie is a risk to human health. It is however notifiable. |
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What is the incubation time of scrapie? | 2-5 years |
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What age does scrapie normally affect sheep? | 3-4 years old |
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What is the pathogenesis of scrapie? | After ingestion, PrPsc first accumulates in Peyer’s patches of the small intestine, gut-associated lymphoid tissues (GALT) and ganglia of the enteric nervous system. It then spreads throughout the lymph nodes, tonsils, spleen, and into the peripheral nervous tissue. It is finally found in the brain several months later. The disease causes astrocyte proliferation and then vacuolization of neurons but demyelination does not occur.
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What are the clinical signs of scrapie? |
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How can scrapies be diagnosed? |
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What are the differential diagnosis for scrapie in sheep? |
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Can scrapie in sheep be treated? | No, scrapie is a fatal condition and no effective treatment is currently available.
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Which allele confers the most resistance to scrapie? | The ARR allele on the PrP gene.
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How can scrapie be controlled ? |
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