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F. M. Lovatt & B. Strugnell

F. M. Lovatt & B. Strugnell . A pilot study on the value of fallen stock necropsy to sheep farmers, with an emphasis on ewe mortality. Flock Health Ltd. Background. In the UK, the Animal Health & Veterinary Laboratories Agency (AHVLA) provides: Disease surveillance Diagnostic service

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F. M. Lovatt & B. Strugnell

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  1. F. M. Lovatt & B. Strugnell A pilot study on the value of fallen stock necropsy to sheep farmers, with an emphasis on ewe mortality Flock Health Ltd

  2. Background In the UK, the Animal Health & Veterinary Laboratories Agency (AHVLA) provides: • Disease surveillance • Diagnostic service Currently this situation is being reviewed by consultation with the aim of • Improving surveillance • Reducing government budgets How can industry benefit more from disease surveillance and diagnosis?

  3. Fallen Stock In UK all fallen stock must be collected by a licensed collector and disposed of according to Animal-By-Products legislation. Carcases are taken to a central location (cost met by farmer) Do these carcases have diagnostic value?

  4. Aims of Project • Establish the diagnostic potential of material collected by fallen stock collectors • Identify risks and constraints, such asautolysis and cross-contamination • Collect pilot information on the approximate prevalence of certain ovine diseases (e.g. Johnes, OPA) • Propose how information gained may be used in the longer term

  5. Why adult ewes? • 15 million breeding ewes in UK • Annual ewe mortality rates estimated at ~5% (0.75 million) • Causes can be estimated from a few sources but not known at flock or national level • Losses usually not investigated because of low economic value of animals • Area probably under-represented by current surveillance arrangements

  6. Total ewe necropsies by AHVLA 2006-2011(England & Wales) Most was ~750/ year in total (2009). Deaths (5% of 10 million)= ~500,000/ year. i.e. ~0.15% of total

  7. Materials & methods • 11 sessions at a fallen stock collection • Average of 10 necropsies per session • Sessions staggered through the year. • Breed, estimated age, body condition and degree of autolysis, gross findings recorded • No clinical history collected for carcases • Further testing commissioned as appropriate • Data collated to be reported

  8. Sample details

  9. Results Diagnosis in 70% of ewes. Results for 106 ewes included.

  10. Mastitis (11%) Most common diagnosis in this study (mainly in May & June) Only 0.3% of all diagnosable submissions to AHVLA (VIDA 2012) Farmer diagnosis hence national data currently lost to surveillance

  11. Acute fasciolosis (7%) Acute fluke was a common diagnosis from October onwards Emphasised how valuable fallen stock necropsy could promptly alert farmers to the need to take action Useful at a farm or regional level Can treat after first ewe dies, not after tenth

  12. Ovine Pulmonary Adenocarcinoma (6%) No useful test in the live animal & likely to be underdiagnosed Average of 28 diagnoses per year by AHVLA 2006-2011 Probably a large cost on high prevalence flocks Is there a place for an accreditation scheme for flocks selling breeding sheep – based on routine PM of fallen stock?

  13. Johnes Disease (6%) • Also probably underdiagnosed and a major cost on endemic flocks • Average of 40 cases per year by AHVLA from 2006-11 • Likely to be a significant ‘iceberg disease’ responsible for much premature culling, poor milk yields/ lamb growth rates. • Some approaches for control. .

  14. Chronic suppurative pneumonia (6%) Pasteurella bronchopneumonia (7%) Caseous Endocarditis (1%) Neoplasia (6%) Lymphadenitis (1%)

  15. Constraints • Despite searing all surfaces prior to bacterial swabbing, and using charcoal transport swabs, bacterial culture results were sometimes overgrown with Proteus and/ or coliforms • Contaminated environment. • Lack of clinical history (might have been treated with antimicrobials) • Attention to minimise this required.

  16. The need for further testing

  17. Further Applications to the sheep Industry Where are the health-related losses? • Infectious Abortion • Perinatal Mortality • Lamb losses turnout-slaughter • Ewe losses (mortality and morbidity) All of these should be relatively cheap to diagnose (with proper application of existing knowledge).

  18. Infectious Abortion Three major causes of infectious ovine abortion account for ~80% of cases: • EAE (Chlamyophila) (~£12 million) • Toxoplasma gondii • Campylobacter The diagnosis is easy to make in all three cases.

  19. Perinatal Mortality Disease-related causes of perinatal lamb mortality: • Watery mouth • Lamb dysentery • Rotavirus • Poor colostral intake • Joint Ill

  20. Diseases of Neonatal Lambs: Diagnosis

  21. Growing Lambs • Worms • Clostridial Disease (pulpy kidney etc.) • Coccidiosis • Pasteurellosis • Acute/ Chronic Fluke …probably together account for 80% of losses (and are NOT hard to diagnose)

  22. 7.3. Diseases of growing lambs: Diagnosis

  23. Diseases of adult ewes • Mastitis • Johnes Disease • OPA • Fluke • Haemonchosis (PGE)

  24. Diseases of adult ewes: Diagnosis

  25. The importance of early diagnosis and intervention • Most sheep farmers will wait until a few have died before wondering whether to investigate. • In some cases this is OK but in some cases further preventable losses ensue. • Fluke and nematodirosis highlight the potential effectiveness of intervening early and with minimal cost and effort to the farmer.

  26. Conclusions: Fallen Stock Survey • Material CERTAINLY diagnostic • Can provide useful flock data to inform interventions • Can provide useful national data to inform useful areas of future research

  27. Conclusions: Further application of principles. • It is more likely that losses will be pursued if to do so is EASY and CHEAP • Sheep farmers are lucky in that the diseases responsible for most of their (disease related) losses are EASY and CHEAP to diagnose. • This knowledge just needs to be applied in the correct situation (i.e. promptly when disease occurs). • The proposed approach is one way to achieve this.

  28. Acknowledgements Flock Health Ltd

  29. QUESTIONS/ DISCUSSION

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