Enzootic Pneumonia - Calves

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Description

A pneumonic disease which is principally of viral origin although mycoplasmas have also been implemented, which are mildly pathogenic unless secondary bacterial infection occurs. In calves a number of infectious agents are involved in the disease. These include Bovine respiratory syncytial virus (BRSV) - can be primary, causes suppression of pulmonary immune response


Acute suppurative pneumonia (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)
Calf pneumonia - chronic, with abscesses, fibrosis (Image sourced from Bristol Biomed Image Archive with permission)
  • Range of infectious agents together with managemental and environmental stress cause damage to the respiratory tract
  • Causes unthriftiness in animals < 6 months old
  • Usually the primary pathogen is a virus, secondary pathogens are bacteria and mycoplasmas
  • Pathogens:
    • Mycoplasmas
      • Mycoplasmal bronchitis and pneumonia of calves is an important component of the syndrome of enzootic pneumonia
      • On its own causes Mycoplasmal ("Cuffing") pneumonia responsible for bronchitis and bronchiolitis and bronchointerstitial pneumonia
      • It is thought to pick up host antigens in order to prevent recognition by the body defences as foreign
      • In uncomplicated mycoplasma infection, the lesions are generally mild and consist of patchy red/purple areas of atelectasis in the cranio-ventral lung lobes
      • More confluent areas can develop with an underlying bronchointestitial pneumonia and resulting atelectasis
      • M. bovis
        • Most pathogenic
        • Widespread lymphofollicular accumulations which contain germinal centres develop more slowly
        • These lesions can result in narrowing of the bronchiolar lumina - this is the classical lesion of ‘cuffing pneumonia’
      • M. dispar
      • Ureaplasma sp.
    • Viruses
  • All transmitted by aerosol and direct contact
  • Gross pathology:
    • Consolidation of the cranioventral areas which increases in volume with duration
    • On cut surface, exudate in the main airway of affected lobules with thickening of the surrounding connective tissue
  • Micro pathology:
    • Substantial lymphoid tissue around the airways
    • Even to proper follicle formation, some of which may be large enough to compress the lumen
    • Mixed cell exudate in the airway lumen
    • Partial alveolar collapse distal to the compression
    • Alveolar exudate contains a mixture of inflammatory cells
    • Slight thickening of the alveolar walls with lymphocytes