Moraxella bovis
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This article has been peer reviewed but is awaiting expert review. If you would like to help with this, please see more information about expert reviewing. |
|
Overview
- Moraxella bovis causes infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis
- Found on mucous membranes of carrier cattle
- Susceptible to desiccation therefore short survival in environment
- Flies act as vectors, in which the bacteria can survive 72 hours
- Other species non-pathogenic
Characteristics
- Short, plump Gram negative rods or cocci occuring in pairs
- Non-motile
- Aerobic
- Catalase positive, oxidase postitive
- Unable to utilise sugars
- No growth on MacConkey agar
- Growth enhanced by addition of blood or serum to media
Pathogenesis and pathogenicity
- Virulent strains have fimbriae, are haemolytic and grow into agar
- Fimbriae allow adherence to the cornea
- Q fimbriae are specific for colonisation; I fimbriae allow local persistence of infection
- Fimbrial antigens stimulate immunity
- Haemolysin, fibrinolysin, phosphatase, hyaluronidase and aminopeptidase as well as LPS contribute to virulence
- Haemolysin damages neutrophil membranes; release of hydrolytic enzymes from these neutrophils damages the corneal surface
- Isolates from carrier animals often avirulent, and are non-haemolytic and have no fimbriae; reversion to virulence can occur
Clnical infections
- Infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis, or pink-eye/New Forest disease is an ocular disease of cattle
- Highly contagious infection of superficial tissues of eye
- Affects animals under 2 years old
- Decreased weight gain in beef cattle, decreased milk production in dairy herds
- Age-related immunity due to previous exposure
- Antibodies against haemolysin neutralise different strains, whereas antibodies to fimbriae are strain-specific
- Asymptomatic carrier animals harbour the bacteria in the nasolacrimal ducts, nasopharynx and vagina
- Transmission by direct contact, aerosol and via flies
- Clinical signs: blepharospasm, conjunctivitis, lacrimation
- Keratitis and corneal ulceration, opacity and abscessation may lead to panophthalmitis and permanent blindness
- Stromal oedema; coning of cornea
- Cornea may heal or undergo permanent scarring
Diagnosis
- Swabs of lacrimal secretions
- Fluorescent antibody test demonstrate presence of M. bovis
- Culture on blood agar; colonies are round, small, shiny and friable
- Virulent strains surrounded by complete haemolysis and are embedded in the agar
- No growth on MacConkey
- Autoagglutination in saline
- Short Gram negative rods on smears
- 7 serotypes based on fimbriae
Treatment and control
- Subconjunctival or topical antimicrobials
- Isolate animals
- Reduce mechanical irritation such as dust, grass, grass seeds
- Insect control
- Control concurrent infections
- Prophylactic oxytetracycline for animals at risk
- Vitamin A supplementation