18 research outputs found

    Effects of adult and larval Haemonchus contortus on abomasal secretion

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    Abomasal pH and serum pepsinogen and gastrin were increased in parasite-naive sheep by infection with either larval or adult H. contortus. Four sheep received 10 000 larvae intraruminally and 9000 adult worms were given directly via an abomasal cannula to another 4 sheep. The latter animals were dosed orally with 0.4 mg kg−1 ivermectin 4 days after worm transfer and their recovery was monitored for a further 8 days. Whereas the presence of adult worms rapidly induced changes in the secretory activity of the abomasum, the early larval stages had minimal effects up to the 4th day post-infection. After either larval or adult infection, the initial hypergastrinaemia began at the same time as the increase in abomasal pH, but serum gastrin continued to increase after abomasal pH had reached a maximum and returned more slowly to normal values after drenching. The increase in serum pepsinogen did not precede those in the other parameters, unlike the earlier hyperpepsinogenaemia which occurs with Ostertagia infection. Three of the 8 infected sheep had no detectable serum pepsinogen increases during the parasitism while showing typical effects on abomasal pH and serum gastrin. The rapidity of the responses to the transfer of adult worms and to their removal by treatment with anthelmintic supports a role for worm excretory/secretory (ES) products which possible are not produced by the early larval stages. The similarity of responses to H. contortus and O. circumcincta infection suggests the involvement of the same or very similar ES products

    Abomasal secretion in sheep receiving adult Ostertagia circumcincta that are prevented from contact with the mucosa

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    Aims. Both adult and larval Ostertagia circumcincta infections raise abomasal pH and serum gastrin and pepsinogen concentrations, either because of physical effects of the worms or from their chemical secretions. The study was designed to examine whether adult worms require contact with the gastric mucosa to effect changes in gastric secretion.\ud \ud Methods. Abomasal pH and serum gastrin and pepsinogen concentrations were measured in four groups of sheep: Group A (n = 4): abomasal contents containing about 18 000 adult O. circumcincta were obtained from donor sheep, concentrated and infused into 5 ”m mesh porous bags attached to surgically implanted abomasal cannulae. A second worm transplantation was carried out 1 week later to assess worm survival after 16 hours. Group B (n = 4): about 9000 adult worms, recovered after migration out of abomasal contents set in agar, were placed in small 5 ”m mesh bags which were inserted through indwelling abomasal cannulae and left for 3 days. Group C (n = 2): about 9000 adult worms from the population recovered from agar were infused through abomasal cannulae which allowed. free movement in the abomasum. Group D (n = 3) was left uninfected.\ud \ud Results. Worms transplanted directly into the abomasum (Group C) caused rapid and marked effects on abomasal secretion. Adult O. circumcincta died within 16 hours of transfer into the abomasum when they were restrained within porous bags. Nevertheless, in sheep receiving 18 000 worms, abomasal pH increased soon after new feed was presented on Days 1, 2 and 4 after worm transfer; serum gastrin was elevated in three sheep from 113 hours and serum pepsinogen increased in one animal. Sheep receiving 9000 worms showed similar trends but the results were equivocal.\ud \ud Conclusions. Adult O. circumcincta prevented from physical contact with the gastric mucosa by restraint in porous bags are able to raise abomasal pH. This study implicates parasite excretory-secretory products in mediating changes in gastric secretion caused by adult abomasal worms

    What are sheep doing? Tri‐axial accelerometer sensor data identify the diel activity pattern of ewe lambs on pasture

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    Monitoring activity patterns of animals offers the opportunity to assess individual health and welfare in support of precision livestock farming. The purpose of this study was to use a triaxial accelerometer sensor to determine the diel activity of sheep on pasture. Six Perendale ewe lambs, each fitted with a neck collar mounting a triaxial accelerometer, were filmed during targeted periods of sheep activities: grazing, lying, walking, and standing. The corresponding acceleration data were fitted using a Random Forest algorithm to classify activity (=classifier). This classifier was then applied to accelerometer data from an additional 10 ewe lambs to determine their activity budgets. Each of these was fitted with a neck collar mounting an accelerometer as well as two additional accelerometers placed on a head halter and a body harness over the shoulders of the animal. These were monitored continuously for three days. A classification accuracy of 89.6% was achieved for the grazing, walking and resting activities (i.e., a new class combining lying and standing activity). Triaxial accelerometer data showed that sheep spent 64% (95% CI 55% to 74%) of daylight time grazing, with grazing at night reduced to 14% (95% CI 8% to 20%). Similar activity budgets were achieved from the halter mounted sensors, but not those on a body harness. These results are consistent with previous studies directly observing daily activity of pasture-based sheep and can be applied in a variety of contexts to investigate animal health and welfare metrics e.g., to better understand the impact that young sheep can suffer when carrying even modest burdens of parasitic nematodes.Seer J. Ikurior, Nelly Marquetoux, Stephan T. Leu, Rene A. Corner-Thomas, Ian Scott and William E. Pomro

    Gastric Ollulanus tricuspis infection identified in captive cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) with chronic vomiting : case report

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    Gastritis, vomition and weight loss are common in captive cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus). Gastric spiral bacteria (Helicobacter spp.) and the very small, viviparous nematode Ollulanus tricuspis, a stomach worm of cats, are believed to be important causes. Three sibling cheetahs at Wellington Zoo, New Zealand, developed chronic vomiting, diarrhoea and debility. Their parents were both South African-born. Response to antibacterial treatment was poor. Endoscopic examinations revealed chronic lymphoplasmacytic gastritis and Ollulanus infection. Treatment with oxfendazole and pyrantel embonate resulted in clinical improvement; however, 1 cheetah, which died 7 months later as a result of a ruptured liver due to hepatic amyloidosis, still had Ollulanus worms present in her stomach. Ollulanus tricuspis is a significant cause of gastritis and vomiting in captive cheetahs, lions and tigers, as well as wild cougars and tigers. The parasite has not yet been found in sub-Saharan Africa. Because of the unusual characteristics of this parasite, the literature on its life history and techniques for diagnosis is reviewed

    Retrospective cohort study of an outbreak of cryptosporidiosis caused by a rare Cryptosporidium parvum subgenotype

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    The occurrence of a gastrointestinal illness among a class of 96 undergraduate veterinary students in New Zealand prompted laboratory and questionnaire-based investigations. Cryptosporidium parvum was the only enteropathogen identified in 4/7 faecal specimens analysed. The C. parvum isolates carried a rare IIa GP60 allele, indicating a point-source outbreak. The infection source could not be microbiologically traced, but the investigation suggested contact with calves during a practical class as the most likely exposure. A total of 25/80 respondents to a questionnaire were defined as cases using a clinical case definition (31% attack rate). The inferred median incubation period was 5 days (range 0–11 days), and the median illness duration was 5–6 days (range 2–23 days), corroborating previous observations in experimental cryptosporidiosis. Disease was self-limiting, characterized by abdominal discomfort, diarrhoea, and in some cases, vomiting. Originating from a rural area and having had previously handled ruminants were associated with a significant risk reduction in males. All the three students who reported chronic use of steroid inhalers for treatment of asthma were cases. This case highlighted, once again, the potential hazard for explosive outbreaks of cryptosporidiosis

    Gastrointestinal nematode infection affects overall activity in young sheep monitored with tri-axial accelerometers

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    Animals suffering from parasitism typically display altered grazing behaviour and a voluntary reduction in feed intake. These changes are potentially important as indicators of disease. Recent advances in sensor technologies provide the opportunity to objectively measure animal activity while on pasture. Tri-axial accelerometers measure body movement in terms of acceleration, which can then be used to estimate physical activity over time. This study investigated if tri-axial measures of overall activity can be used to assess the impact of gastrointestinal nematode (GIN) infection in young sheep. To address this, the overall activity, faecal nematode egg count (FEC) and body weight of two treatment groups of Romney X Suffolk ram lambs were compared. Animals were monitored for four days using tri-axial accelerometer sensors mounted on a ram mating harness after 42-days grazing on contaminated pasture. On Day 0, all lambs were given anthelmintics. Subsequently, a Suppressive Treatment Group (n = 12) was treated with anthelmintics every two weeks. An Untreated Group (n = 12) did not receive further anthelmintics. Overall activity levels were monitored from Day 42 – 46. Activity level was calculated as vectorial dynamic body acceleration (VeDBA). Anthelmintic treatment had a significant effect on FEC but there was no evidence found for a treatment effect on body weight growth over the 42-day period. An effect of treatment and lamb starting weight on overall activity was found (beta = –0.74, 95 % CI –1.17 to –0.30, p =  0.002), identifying a negative impact of parasitism on activity in heavier animals. These results highlight the usefulness of this approach in assessing the effect of GIN parasitism on sheep monitored remotely. If a threshold value of activity could be determined, it could provide a useful tool for farmers and managers that serves as an early indicator of parasitism in sheep.Seer J.Ikurior, William E.Pomroy, Ian Scott, Rene Corner-Thomas, Nelly Marquetoux, Stephan T.Le

    Hypergastrinaemia, abomasal bacterial population densities and pH in sheep infected with Ostertagia circumcincta

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    Serum gastrin and pepsinogen concentrations, food intake, abomasal pH and abomasal aerotolerant and anaerobic bacterial populations were measured in sheep infected with Ostertagia circumcincta to search for links between hypergastrinaemia, food intake and changes in the abomasal environment. Abomasal pH and serum gastrin and pepsinogen concentrations were elevated in each of five sheep infected via abomasal cannulae with 150 000 exsheathed larval stage three, followed 11 days later by 100 000 sheathed larvae given intraruminally. Unparasitised abomasa contained aerotolerant bacterial population densities of between 103 and 106 cells ml−1 and these did not change significantly following parasitism. In contrast, anaerobic bacterial population densities increased markedly by about 104-fold following parasitism. Anaerobic numbers changed rapidly when abomasal pH increased from 2.5 to 3.5. At pH 4 and above, anaerobic bacterial numbers approached levels expected in rumen contents but parameters other than pH did not relate to bacterial numbers. Brief periods when serum gastrin was lower than expected, coinciding with raised abomasal pH, were not explicable by increased bacterial numbers. Food intake, which decreased for a variable period from around Day 5 p.i., correlated poorly with serum gastrin concentration, suggesting hypergastrinaemia is not the sole cause of anorexia in parasitised animals. The survival of substantial numbers of rumen bacteria in the abomasum at only slightly raised pH may significantly lower the bacterial protein available to the sheep
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