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Perplexing Parakeet Problem Brieuc Cossic Anatomic Pathology Resident Advisor: Dr. Teresa Southard Cornell University
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NEVPC 2016 Poxvirus Parakeet BC TS edits

Apr 13, 2017

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Page 1: NEVPC 2016 Poxvirus Parakeet BC TS edits

Perplexing Parakeet Problem

Brieuc CossicAnatomic Pathology Resident

Advisor: Dr. Teresa SouthardCornell University

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HISTORY• Female, 50 g, 2 year old, opal red-rumped parakeet

(Psephotus haematonotus)

• Part of a larger flock with 7 recently-acquired birds• All 7 birds developed severe respiratory distress• All 7 + 6 parakeets died• No improvement with antibiotics

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Caudal Cranial

Beak

Choanal slit

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H&E Giemsa

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Findings

Head, nasal cavity, infraorbital sinuses and feathered skin:

Moderate, multifocally extensive, proliferative lymphoplasmacytic and heterophilic rhinitis, sinusitis and dermatitis with intra-cytoplasmic eosinophilic Bollinger bodies

Condition: Avian pox, mixed diphtheric and cutaneous form

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Ancillary testing

Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded pieces of tissue submitted for PCR:

University of Georgia, Fowlpox PCR: Negative

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Discussion

• Cause of death

– Respiratory distress, occlusion of the upper respiratory tract

– Anorexia, dehydration

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Parakeets die-off- Similar lesions reported in birds quarantined in south

Florida

- Our birds may have:- Contracted the virus in Florida- Contracted the virus in upstate New-York

The stress of the travel and the introduction in a new flock may have facilitated the infection

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Avipoxviruses

• Described in 278 bird species from 70 families and 20 orders (32 psittacines):– Poultry industry– Pet birds industry– Endangered species– Ecosystems

• Worldwide distribution

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Avipoxviruses

• Double stranded DNA virus• Two major forms: cutaneous and diphtheric• Production of epidermal growth factor-like• Transmission is usually direct– Indirect is less common (fomites, mosquitos, mites)

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Ancillary tests results

• PCR negative:

- Time in formalin / fixation- Time in decalcification solution- Sequence of the primers

Psittacinepox and fowlpox are in different clades

Jarmin et al., (2006)

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Giemsa

Tripathy et al., 1973. Immunoperoxidase technique for detection of Fowlpox Antigen. Avian diseases, 17(2):274-278.

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Hernandez et al., 2001.

Electronic microscopy

- Membrane-bound inclusions- Convoluted outer membrane- Lateral bodies- Biconcave central core

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Bollinger bodies

Dr. Otto Bollinger German pathologist (1843-1909). Wikipedia.

Otto Bollinger, (1873), was the first to demonstrate a relationship between the lesions and the inclusions bodies, several years before the discovery of the first virus by Dmitry Ivanosky, in 1892

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Acknowledgments

• Dr. Teresa Southard• Dr. Nicholas Wolfer for submitting this case• Drs. Elizabeth Buckles and Jarra Jagne for their

help• Necropsy and histology staff

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References• Beaufrere H., Bhaskaran M., Jankowski G, et al. 2009. What's your

diagnosis? Journal of Avian Medicine and Surgery 23(4):325-328• Hernandez M., Sanchez C., Margarita E.G., et al., 2001. Avian pox

infection in Spanish Imperial eagles (Aquila adalberti). Avian Pathology, 30:1, 91-97

• Jarmin S., Manvell R., Gough R.E., et al. 2006. Avipoxvirus phylogenetics: identification of a PCR length polymorphism that discriminates between the two major clades. J, of General Virol. 87(8), 2191-2201.

• Van Riper C. and Forrester D., 2007. Avian Pox. In: Infectious Disease of Wild birds. Thomas N.J., Hunter D.B., Atkinson C.T. Eds: Wiley-Blackwell, 131-176.

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Questions?