Nervous Disease in
Sheep
Listeriosis
·
Winter-Spring
disease, associated with silage feeding.
·
Caused by Listeria
monocytogenes bacterium that
lives in plant-soil environment, in particular, the less acidic soil of spoiled
silage; which enhances multiplication of the bacteria.
·
Usually clinical outbreak only affects around 2% of a flock. Outbreaks occur around 14-21 days after ingestion of poor
silage.
·
Typical occurrence includes: sheep
aged 18-24 months; poorly stored silage; rarely higher than 2%
incidence, 14-21 days after
silage ingestion.
·
Clinical
presentation is based on the infection usually only limited to one side of
the brain; hence the one-sided appearance
of the nerve paralysis. Initially,
sheep do not eat/come to food
trough, are depressed, disorientated and show erratic
movements into corners, fences or feed troughs. Often leaning against objects is seen, due to weakness affecting one side
of the body, with knuckling of the foreleg. Profuse salivation and food impacted in the cheek of the affected
side. Drooping of the ear, deviated muzzle, flaccid lip and lowered
eyelid on the affected side.
·
KEY
SIGNS: not eating, depressed, disoriented, propelling into corners,
leaning, salivation, food impaction, drooping ear, deviated muzzle, flaccid lip
and lowered eyelid.
·
Differential
diagnosis include: pregnancy
toxaemia, peripheral vestibular lesions, brain abscesses or Gid.
·
Treatment
depends on early detection and
aggressive anti-biotic use. High doses are needed in order to
achieve high conc. of anti-biotic in the brain
tissue. Side treatments include sugar drench to avoid severe energy
deficit, palatable fresh food, clean water and topical antibiotic eye ointment.
Polioencephalomalacia
(Cerebrocortical necrosis/CCN)
·
Most commonly seen, but not limited to, weaned lambs aged 4-8 months. Usually seen about 2
weeks after pasture or dietary
change.
·
Early
stages appear that sheep are blind
and isolated from the group, wandering aimlessly and star-gazing when stationary. Condition deteriorates within 12-24 hours to lateral recumbency with seizure
activity during handling. Without treatment, death follows within 3-5
days.
·
Clinical
signs include: blind; isolated;
wander aimlessly; star-gazing; recumbency with seizure activity.
·
Caused by brain
swelling and laminar necrosis of
the cerebral cortex, resulting from interference with brain metabolism. This metabolic fault is related to thiamine deficiency at cell level. In cells, thiamine
pyrophosphate is needed for decarboxylation of pyruvate during the
conversion of pyruvate to AcCoA. When thiamine deficiency occurs, membrane
repolarization occurs (as lack of energy produced), pyrophosphate is reduced
and pyruvate and lactate accumulate.
Some bacteria in some forages, produce thiaminase
which breaks down thiamine. These bacteria are often found in the rumen of CCN
affected sheep.
·
Treatment
of high doses of thiamine (10mg/kg) intravenously
for first occasion is good. Normal vision may not return for up to a week, but
should be able to stand within 24 hours. Treatment should be continued for 3 consecutive days. Intravenous
thiamine (Vitamin B1).
Coenurosis (Gid)
·
Uncommon
disease however still occurs in some areas. Treatment of farm dogs with anthelmintics and correct disposal of sheep carcasses
have broken the sheep/dog cycle.
·
Dogs act as a reservoir for the disease; Coenurus cerebralis is the larval stage of the Taenia multiceps tapeworm, which infests the small
intestine of dogs. Defecation on sheep pastures, which are then grazed by
sheep, can lead to larval invasion
of the CNS, forming a cyst in the brain
and clinical disease. The life cycle is complete when the larvae develop into tapeworm
and ingest the infested sheep brain.
·
Clinical
presentation of chronic coenurosis is more commonly reported in growing sheep aged 6-18 months, where the signs develop slowly and progressively. Compulsive circling behaviour,
depression and head-pressing may occur.
·
Treatment
is usually successful, with 85% surgical success rate for removal of coenurus cyst from the brain. Economic
reasons cause most farmers to euthanize affected sheep.
Vestibular disease
(middle ear infections)
·
Unilateral
peripheral vestibular lesions are commonly associated with middle ear infections and ascending infection of the Eustachian tube.
·
Clinical
presentation consists of head tilted
and loss of balance.
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