1 / 17

Tuberculosis Control Program

4-H Veterinary Science Extension Veterinary Medicine Texas AgriLife Extension Service College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences Texas A&M System http://aevm.tamu.edu. Tuberculosis Control Program. Objectives. Discuss the decrease in the prevalence of tuberculosis in cattle

ilad
Télécharger la présentation

Tuberculosis Control Program

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 4-H Veterinary Science Extension Veterinary Medicine Texas AgriLife Extension Service College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences Texas A&M System http://aevm.tamu.edu Tuberculosis Control Program

  2. Objectives Discuss the decrease in the prevalence of tuberculosis in cattle Understand that health regulations are health management practices used to prevent the spread of disease

  3. Bacterial disease of cattle • Mycobacterium bovis • Reportable • Zoonotic

  4. Causative Agent Bacteria Strain Mycobacterium bovis Bacteria not resilient in environment Dry conditions (2 weeks) Moist conditions (2 months)

  5. Transmission Exit from cattle Exhale (aerosol) Milk Saliva Environmental contamination

  6. Entry to cattle (direct contact)‏ Inhale (aerosol)‏ Increase risk in confinement Ingest (milk)‏ Entry to cattle (indirect contact)‏ Ingest (shared water systems)‏ Saliva Ingest (contaminated soil)‏

  7. Incubation period 8 to 60 days Bacteria difficult to diagnose because it multiplies slowly Once every 20 hours

  8. Diagnosis Clinical symptoms (advanced cases)‏ Chronic emaciation Respiratory distress Clinical symptoms (mild cases)‏ None

  9. Post mortem/slaughter findings Nodules/lesions (tubercles, abscesses)‏ Lungs Lymph nodes Abdominal organs Reproductive organs Nervous system Bone

  10. Tubercles

  11. Cheese-pusLesion in Lymph Nodes of Lungs

  12. Test with Tuberculin skin tests (caudal fold, cervical) Post mortem test Serological test Results known 72 hours later (skin test) Positive result reads as swelling in injection area If positive, more tests needed

  13. Prevention Ways to prevent TB Closed herds TB-free herds Test new animals Maintain fences Cooperate with state officials

  14. Regulation and Eradication 1917—Cooperative State-Federal TB Eradication Program established USDA-APHIS State animal health agencies U.S. livestock producers

  15. Depopulate quarantined herds Surveillance program Slaughter lesions Voluntary herd-testing program Herd accredited-free

  16. Interstate movement testing requirement Interstate breeding cattle Identification and test Interstate feeder cattle Identification (pending) Interstate livestock shows testing requirement

  17. Nearly eradicated in U.S. Texas status Modified-accredited-advanced Texas FEAD Emergency Response Plan Identify positive animals and destroy Reduce amount of time to get test results Track origin of suspect animals

More Related