绵羊和山羊的传染性无乳症:当前展望。

IF 1.7 Q2 VETERINARY SCIENCES
Veterinary medicine (Auckland, N.Z.) Pub Date : 2019-12-27 eCollection Date: 2019-01-01 DOI:10.2147/VMRR.S201847
Maryne Jaÿ, Florence Tardy
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引用次数: 17

摘要

传染性无乳症(CA)是一种由四种支原体以单一或混合感染方式平均引起的疾病。临床症状多种多样,包括乳腺炎、关节炎、角结膜炎、肺炎和败血症,非特异性,根据绵羊或山羊是否受到影响,在致病支原体和饲养类型上表现不同。CA在世界各地都有报道,其地理分布图与小型反刍动物繁殖区的地理分布图一致。然而,由于目前的诊断测试成本高昂且难以实施,它肯定诊断不足,而且只有少数国家的流行率数据可用。CA的控制依赖于疫苗、化疗和良好的群体管理实践。它需要长期的承诺,但往往不成功,临床上经常复发。尽管病原体对抗菌药物总体敏感,但它们的持久性来自于它们的遗传可塑性和逃避宿主免疫反应的能力。无症状携带者的存在和众多的感染源导致了疾病的快速传播,并使控制和预防工作复杂化。在这里,我们回顾了所有这些方面,以突出最近取得的进展,并确定更好的疾病管理所需的知识或工具方面的差距。讨论还强调了传染性无乳症对小型反刍动物福利的有害影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Contagious Agalactia In Sheep And Goats: Current Perspectives.

Contagious Agalactia In Sheep And Goats: Current Perspectives.

Contagious agalactia (CA) is a disease caused equally by four Mycoplasma species, in single or mixed infections. Clinical signs are multiple, including mastitis, arthritis, keratoconjunctivitis, pneumonia, and septicemia, non-specific, and expressed differently depending whether sheep or goats are affected, on causative mycoplasmas as well as type of husbandry. CA has been reported worldwide and its geographic distribution maps to that of small ruminant breeding areas. However, as current diagnostic tests are expensive and difficult to implement, it is certainly underdiagnosed and prevalence data are only available for a few countries. CA control relies on vaccines, chemotherapy and good herd management practices. It requires long-term commitment but is often unsuccessful, with frequent clinical relapses. The persistence of the etiological agents, despite their overall susceptibility to antimicrobials, comes from their genetic plasticity and capacity to escape the host immune response. The existence of asymptomatic carriers and the numerous sources of infections contribute to rapid spread of the disease and complicate the control and prevention efforts. Here we review all these aspects in order to highlight recent progress made and identify gaps in knowledge or tools needed for better disease management. Discussion also underlines the detrimental effect of contagious agalactia on small ruminant welfare.

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