Psoroptes
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- Causes psoroptic skin infestation
Recognition
- Oval shaped
- Long legs
- Funnel shaped suckers on segmented pedicels
- 1-2mm in length
Life cycle
- Confined to skin surface
- Feed on serous exudate by siphoning
- Adult female can lay up to 100 eggs during her life time (1 month)
- 10 day life cycle
- 2 nymphal stages
Psoroptes cuniculi
- Parasite of rabbits
- Common among conventional rabbits
- Transmitted via contact
- Adapted to living in an aural environment
Pathogenesis
- The ears are painful and intensely pruritic
- Affected rabbits shake their heads and scratch their ears
- The inner surfaces of the pinnae are covered with brown, scaly, fetid material, and the skin beneath is raw
- Mites are grossly visible
- Histologically, there is chronic erosive and proliferative eosinophilic dermatitis
- The mites are non-burrowing and thus are found only in the exudate, not in the tissue
Diagnosis
- Microscopic examination for mites (low magnification)
- Appearance
Control
- Infestations are difficult to eliminate from a colony
- Ivermectin is usually effective
Psoroptes ovis
- Adult females are large mites at 750μm in length
- Males identified by copulatory suckers and paired posterior lobes
- Males attach to deutonymphs (second moult after larval stage) in a process called copula
- Males remain in copula until females moult for the last time
- Copulation occurs
- Life cycle last 14 days
- Transmitted by direct contact between sheep
- Indirect transmission can also occur
Pathogenesis
- Economically important ectoparasite of sheep
- Causes sheep scab
- Wool loss, restlessness, biting, scratching of infested area and decreased productivity through decreased weight gain
- Usually seen in late autumn and early winter (although may also occur in late summer)
- Population numbers decline after shearing due to a change in the micro-climate, then build up again as the fleece grows
- Notifiable in UK
- Mites found under scabs and in skin folds
- Lesions most common on flanks, neck, back and shoulders
- Causes pruritic condition of cattle
- Active in keratin layer
- Mouthparts abrade the skin
- Antigenic material in mite faeces can lead to hypersensitivity reactions
Diagnosis
- Skin scraping
- KOH added
- Warm slide over a bunsen flame
- Examine under a microscope
Treatment
- Sheep
- Plunge dipping; no less than 1 minute and must dip head at lease once
- Can treat with avermectins or milbemycins by injection
- Cattle, horses and rabbits
- No licensed product for horses in the UK
- Cattle and rabbits can be treated with avermectins, milbemycins or topical acaricides