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Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: [email protected] Abortion Pathology
47

Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: [email protected].

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVPAssistant Professor

Veterinary Medical Diagnostic LaboratoryUniversity of Missouri

E-mail: [email protected]

Abortion Pathology

Page 2: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Abortion: Expulsion of the fetus before full development; may be alive or dead

Stillbirth: Expulsion of a dead fetus at full gestational developmentDetermination of term in bovines?

Embryonic death vs. Fetal death: Occurs earlier in the gestational periodMay appear as infertility

Defining Terms

Page 3: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Confounding factors Loss of agent In utero autolysis Loss of placenta Genetic causes Toxic causes Other non-infectious causes

In 814 abortions, a specific cause was identified in 29.5% Anderson, Blanchard, Barr. A survey of causes of bovine abortion occurring in the San Joaquin

Valley, CA. Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation. 1990 Oct; 2(4):283-7

In 1,784 abortions, etiologic Dx was made in 44%Kirkbride CA. Diagnoses in 1,784 ovine abortions and stillbirths. Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic

Investigation. 1993 Jul; 5(3):398-402

Frequency of good Dx on abortion cases?

Page 4: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Sheep/goats no diagnosis in approximately 55%

Pigs 1/3 of cases have a diagnosisEquine occur 10-15%, with 16% idiopathic

Typically in 1st 40 days or late in termShoulder joints of late term fetus for

hemarthrosis/fractures

Species variation

Page 5: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.
Page 6: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Maceration: putrefactive destruction of the fetus; assoc’d with endometritisFetid odorBacterial etiologiesEmphysema

Mummification: retained fetus, progressively dehydrated; virtually sterile => no lytic organismsViral or non-infectious etiologiesMay be held indefinitelyParvovirus (porcines) => vary among piglets

Maceration vs. Mummification

Page 7: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Maceration => “Chewed up”

Page 8: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Mummification => “Dried up”

Page 9: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

TwinningMC a problem in the mareAssoc’d with Freemartinism

Page 10: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.
Page 11: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Can be nearly anything that infects the uterus and/or placentaSalmonella, Pasteurella, Haemophilus,

Streptococcus, E. coli, T. pyogenes, etc.Lesions are non-specific

Suppurative placentitisSuppurative bronchopneumonia, fetalSepticemia, fetal

Fetal abomasal fluid is critical

Bacterial Causes

Page 12: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.
Page 13: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Fibrinous Placentitis

Page 14: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Normal

Side by side comparison

Inflamed

Page 15: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Campylobacter fetus var. venerealisBovineVenereally transmitted from prepuce/penisED or early fetal death => irregular estrusIncreased resistance

Campylobacter fetus subsp. fetus and jejuniOvine => develop metritis => deathLate term abortions => abortion stormsHepatic necrosis, fetus

Campylobacter

Page 16: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Brucella abortusBovine => ingestion => systemicMay infect trophoblast cells

Brucella canisIngestion or venereal => head/neck

lymphadenitisFetus: endocarditis, pneumonia, hepatitis

Brucella ovis / melitensis (goats)VenerealShed in milk

Brucella suisLesions in bone/jointsDoes not require pregnancy => endometritis

Brucella => ZOONOTIC!!!

Page 17: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Coxiella burnetti => ZOONOTIC!!!Q-fever in humansOvines and Caprines, goats MCIngestion or inhalationShed in vaginal discharge or milk, Giemsa stainIntercotyledonary chorioallantois

Thick yellow, covered with exudateChlamydophila abortus (ovine)

Late term abortion, fetal autolysisOral transmissionImmune to re-infectionIntercotyledonary chorioallantois

Page 18: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Intercotyledonary Chorioallantois

Page 19: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Leptospira => ZOONOTIC!!! Largely bovine and porcine

L. interrogans serovar hardjo and serovar pomona Often no c/s => localize in the kidneys Abortion weeks after septicemic phase, in last trimester Placental edema with fetal ascites and peritonitis Advanced fetal autolysis

Flexispira rappini Similar to Campylobacter, liver necrosis, Giemsa +

Foothill abortion In CA and adjacent states Cows new to the territory Lesion

Petechiation of conjunctiva and tongue

Page 20: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Leptospirosis

Page 21: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Bovine, ovine, and caprineLast trimesterLesions

Suppurative hepatitisFibrin in body cavitiesSuppurative placentitis

Lesion in the fetus/calf?

Listeria monocytogenes => ZOONOTIC

Page 22: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Multiple etiologies “Herpesvirus hates babies!”

Fetal mummificationDevelopmental anomaliesAkabane and Cache Valley (Bunyaviridae)

Ovines and other ruminantsNervous malformationArthrogryposis

Bluetongue (orbiviridae) => Summer/Early FallMC in ovineNervous malformation: encephalitis and retinitisArthrogryposisExposed prior to day 100, may clear the virus =>

neg PCR

Viral Causes

Page 23: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.
Page 24: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Equine

Page 25: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Feline

Page 26: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Arthrogryposis

Page 27: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

HerpesvirusLymphoid necrosis spleen/thymusHepatic necrosis, multifocalPulmonary necrosis, multifocal (equine)

Fibrin plaques in lung & trachea => characteristic

Pestivirus BVD (bov); Border Dz (ovi); Hog Cholera (por)Fetal death or malformationPersistently infected BVD calves, day 120Persistently infected kids, b/f day 60-80“Hairy Shakers” => sheep, thick haircoat,

pigmentedTargets oligodendrocytes =>

hypomyelinogenesis

Page 28: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Porcine parvovirus (environmental)Embryonic and early fetal lossMummification

PRRS (Arteriveridae), 60% of porcine abortionsHemorrhage in umbilical cordsAffects 50% of fetuses in litter

Interstitial pneumonia in live littermates

Porcine Circovirus => myocardium and lymphoid

CSF/Pseudorabies => Feral pig reservoirSow Infertility Syndrome (Virus X)

SMEDI (78% in pigs)

Page 29: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.
Page 30: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Porcine Maceration

Page 31: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Toxoplasma gondii (ovine) Ingestion Necrotic, “rice grain” on cotyledons Leukoencephalomalacia, fetus Placentitis

Neospora caninum (bovine) Abort in 2nd trimester, few lesions Necrosis in the brain and heart with cysts Vertical transmission Variable pathogenicity

Tritrichomonas foetus (bovine) Mild placentitis, may have severe endometritis =>

pyometra No fetal lesions Protozoa within abomasal fluids, smegma, or vaginal

swab Giemsa highlights organism in placenta, lung, and

abomasum

Protozoal Etiologies

Page 32: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Toxoplasmosis gondii

Page 33: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Intercotyledonary

Chlamydophila vs. Toxoplasma

Cotyledonary

Page 34: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Neospora

Page 35: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Neospora

Page 36: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

MC assoc’d with plaques on the skinMC cause of abortion Aspergillus sp.

Others: Mucor, Rhizopus, Absidia, CandidaMC in bovine & equine

Bovine => hematogenousEquine => cervix

RARE in porcine, approximately 0.3% fungal Fibrinous placentitis => identical to bacterial

Fungal abortions

Page 37: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.
Page 38: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

VirusHerpesvirusCanine Parvovirus type 1 / Panleukopenia

Necrotizing enteritis w/ eos i/b, no crypt necrosisAdenovirus type 1

BacteriaBrucella, E. coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Beta

hemolytic Streptococcus spp.Other

Feline: Antifungal drugs =>teratogenic effectsNSAIDS, glucocorticoids, tetracyclines,

chloramphenicol

Canine & Feline

Page 39: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Nitrate ToxicosisConsumption of plants high in nitrates or

contaminated water (nitrogen fertilizers)Chocolate brown blood, no lesionsTest levels of nitrate in aqueous humor

CO in porcine (b/t 120 and 260 pppm)Dx with 5-10 mL of thoracic fluidCarboxyhemoglobin levels >2% are diagnostic

Variable Toxicity TeratogensPine needles, broomweed, swainsonine, Sweet

pea,Arthrogryposis

Lupine, Tobacco, Poison Hemlock, LocoweedClover => Estrogen => Infertility

Other causes

Page 40: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Synophthalmia (cyclopia) in ovinesVeratrum californicum, day 13-15

Schistosomas reflexusAmorphous globosusSpider Lamb Dz = > SuffolkTorsion of the umbilical cord

EquinesXS twisting compromises umbilical vessels

Fetal anomalies

Page 41: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.
Page 42: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.
Page 43: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.
Page 44: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Determination of Fetal AgeCR length AND body weightDevelopmental features

Timing of Fetal DeathLungs, eponychium, colostrum in the

stomach/abomasum, umbilical hematomaTissue collection

BacterialLungs, Abomasal/stomach fluid, brain, placenta,

liverViral

Lymphoid tissues, placenta

Fetal Necropsy Protocol

Page 45: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Umbilical Hematoma

Page 46: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

SerologyFetal fluidsInterpretation: What is normal?

ToxicologyOcular fluid/eyes in bovines => Nitrates

CytologyImpression smears

HistopathologyGI tract can be largely ignored

Fetal Nx (cont’d)

Page 47: Dr. Fred Williams III, DVM, DACVP Assistant Professor Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory University of Missouri E-mail: williamsfre@missouri.edu.

Questions?