JPC SYSTEMIC PATHOLOGY
DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
August 2024
D-B05
SLIDE A:
SIGNALMENT (JPC #2548132): 6-day-old male crossbred lamb
HISTORY: This lamb was weak
HISTOPATHOLOGIC DESCRIPTION: Liver: Affecting approximately 40% of the liver are multifocal to coalescing, random, 1-3 mm diameter circular foci of coagulative necrosis characterized by loss of differential staining with retention of cellular architecture. The foci are rimmed by eosinophilic and karyorrhectic debris, necrotic leukocytes, basophilic fragmented material (mineral), and radiating colonies of 1 µm wide basophilic, extracellular, filamentous bacilli. Hepatic cords surrounding necrotic areas are frequently discontinuous with individualization of hepatocytes that are swollen and vacuolated (degeneration) or shrunken with hypereosinophilic cytoplasm and a pyknotic nucleus (necrosis). Multifocally, sinusoids are dilated up to three times by blood (congestion).
MORPHOLOGIC DIAGNOSIS: Liver: Necrosis, coagulative, acute, multifocal, random, moderate, with extracellular filamentous bacilli, crossbred sheep, ovine.
CAUSE: Fusobacterium necrophorum
CONDITION: Hepatic necrobacillosis
SLIDE B:
SIGNALMENT (JPC #2951028): 6 month old captive female white-tailed deer fawn
HISTORY: This fawn was found acutely dyspneic, drooling, unable to fully open its mouth, and with a soft tissue swelling under the jaw that extended to the left mandibular ramus. The overall body condition was good. The fawn died after two days of antibiotic therapy. Necropsy findings included several small abscesses at the base of the tongue, a soft tissue mass filling the cranial larynx, and no bony changes to the jaw.
HISTOPATHOLOGIC DESCRIPTION: Esophagus and larynx: The esophagus and larynx are multifocally ulcerated and covered by a 2mm thick mat of necrotic eosinophilic cellular and karyorrhectic debris, fibrin, necrotic neutrophils, macrophages, hemorrhage, and numerous 1-2um bacilli and filamentous bacteria. The inflammation, necrosis, edema and bacteria extend transmurally through the esophageal wall and infiltrate deep into the laryngeal connective tissue and skeletal muscle to the cartilage. A focally extensive region of myocytes are shrunken (atrophy) and hypereosinophilic with karyolytic nuclei (necrotic). In less affected areas myocytes are surrounded and separated by macrophages and neutrophils. Multifocally myocytes are swollen and vacuolated (degenerate) or replaced by basophilic granular material (mineral). Multifocally blood vessel walls are discontinuous and transmurally disrupted by hypereosinophilic homogenous material (fibrinoid necrosis) or necrotic neutrophils and filamentous bacteria (vasculitis). Affected vessels often contain fibrin thrombi.
MORPHOLOGIC DIAGNOSIS: Esophagus and larynx: Laryngitis and esophagitis, fibrinonecrotic, acute, focally extensive, severe, with fibrinoid vascular necrosis, necrotizing myositis, and numerous extracellular filamentous and bacillary bacteria, White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), cervid.
CAUSE: Fusobacterium necrophorum
CONDITION: Laryngeal necrobacillosis; necrotic laryngitis
GENERAL DISCUSSION:
- Gram-negative, pleomorphic, filamentous, obligate anaerobe that is a normal inhabitant of the alimentary tract, respiratory tract, and reproductive tract
- Opportunistic pathogen common in livestock, causing a variety of suppurative and necrotic infections (oral, pharynx/larynx, digital, mandible/maxilla, liver)
- Family Bacteroidaceae; four biovars; two with subspecies status:
- F. necrophorum, subsp. necrophorum (biotype A) - more virulent
- F. necrophorum, subsp. funduliforme (biotype B)
PATHOGENESIS:
- Common predisposing factors include ruminal acidosis in feedlot cattle and omphalitis (navel ill) in calves and lambs
- Ruminal damage (e.g. toxic rumenitis) or omphalitis > entry via portal circulation > initial localization in the liver > hepatocellular necrosis and hepatitis > hepatic abscess
- Hepatic abscess may obstruct the hepatic vein or caudal vena cava, causing hepatic passive congestion and portal hypertension
- Hepatic abscesses may rupture into the hepatic vein or caudal vena cava, causing fatal septic embolization of the lungs
- Virulence factors: Leukotoxin (leukocidin), hemolysin, and endotoxin (LPS) production cause toxin-induced necrosis; also hemagglutinin
- Leukocidin is specifically toxic to ruminant neutrophils and reduces phagocytosis by activating neutrophils and inducing their apoptosis – cause of significant abscessation
- Commonly found in mixed synergistic infections where facultative pathogens lower oxygen tension (allowing growth of F. necrophorum), and F. necrophorum leukotoxin protects the other organism from phagocytosis
- Leukocidin is specifically toxic to ruminant neutrophils and reduces phagocytosis by activating neutrophils and inducing their apoptosis – cause of significant abscessation
TYPICAL CLINICAL FINDINGS:
- Often no clinical signs in adult cattle
- Acute cases: Fever, depression, anorexia, decreased milk production, abdominal pain
- Chronic cases: Anorexia, emaciation, diarrhea
- Leukocytosis and increased liver enzymes may occur, but are often not seen in chronic cases
TYPICAL GROSS FINDINGS:
- Liver: Most common lesion includes a multifocal dry, white-tan, 2-5 cm, sharply demarcated, slightly elevated, rounded areas of coagulative necrosis often surrounded by a zone of intense hyperemia
- Rumen: Superficial mucosal necrosis and ulceration of the anterior ventral sac and occasionally the pillars; scar formation
- Oral and larynx: Acute necroulcerative lesions of the pharyngeal, laryngeal, lingual and buccal mucosa +/- abscesses due to secondary infection
TYPICAL LIGHT MICROSCOPIC FINDINGS:
- Liver, acute: Circumscribed, random areas of coagulative necrosis bordered by a zone of degenerate neutrophils and clusters of radiating, filamentous bacteria; outermost zone of hyperemia/hemorrhage with frequent vascular thrombosis of local vessels
- Liver, subacute to chronic: Multifocal lytic necrosis with neutrophils, lymphocytes and macrophages, and gradual formation of a fibrous capsule
- Oral necrobacillosis/necrotic stomatitis and laryngitis (Calf diphtheria): Acute necroulcerative inflammation of the pharyngeal, laryngeal, and buccal mucosa often with secondary infection
ADDITIONAL DIAGNOSTIC TESTS:
- Culture, ELISA, PCR, fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH)
- Cytological Findings: Light blue rods with intermittent, small, pink-to-purple beaded appearance +/- sulfur granules
- Cytologically similar to Nocardia and Actniomyces spp.
- May also be found in urine samples
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS:
Sheep and cattle: Multifocal random hepatic necrosis (hepatocellular necrosis)
- Infectious necrotic hepatitis (black disease): Clostridium novyi; most commonly associated with migration tracts of Fasciola hepatica; necrotic lesions similar but often linear and a single large lesion with sharp delineation of pale necrotic liver surrounded by hyperemic zone; alpha and beta toxins
- Bacillary hemoglobinuria (red water): Clostridium hemolyticum; also associated with migration tracts of Fasciola hepatica; lesions similar to C. novyi; intravascular hemolysis with anemia and hemoglobinuria; beta toxin (phospholipase C) induce hepatocellular necrosis
- Trueperella pyogenes (often isolated with F. necrophorum); Campylobacter fetus (neonatal lambs), Staphylococcus and Streptococcus can also cause hepatic abscesses
- Mycotic hepatitis (Mucor sp., Rhizopus sp., Absidia sp.): Damage to ruminal mucosa (ruminal acidosis) allows ruminal microflora to enter the portal circulation
- Clostridium piliforme (Tyzzer’s Disease): Uncommon in sheep; rather than bacteria being within the necrotic area as is the case with F. necrophorum, C. piliforme is found in the normal hepatocytes at the edge of the necrosis
- Traumatic reticuloperitonitis: Direct implantation of bacteria via foreign-body penetration
- Rift Valley Fever: Mosquito-transmitted zoonotic viral disease, family Bunyaviridae, genus Phlebovirus; hepatomegaly with pale 1 to 2 mm random foci of hepatocellular necrosis, centrilobular and midzonal; eosinophilic intranuclear inclusion bodies may be seen and fibrin deposition in sinusoids is common; more severe in young animals (calves, lambs)
COMPARATIVE PATHOLOGY:
Other Diseases/Lesions Caused by F. necrophorum
- Cattle:
- Necrotic stomatitis, enteritis, and granulocytopenia have been associated with F. necrophorum; affected calves have nonregenerative anemia, leukopenia, neutropenia, and hypoproteinemia
- Necrobacillary rumenitis: Secondary to ruminal acidosis
- Necrobacillary metritis
- Necrobacillosis of the foot: Mixed infection with F. necrophorum as the primary pathogen (also Bacteroides melaninogenicus)
- Necrobacillary pododermatitis (Contagious foot rot): Mild, similar to benign foot rot in sheep; mixed infection involving F. necrophorum with Dichelobacter nodosus as the primary pathogen
- Epidural/subdural abscess: secondary to vertebral body osteomyelitis
- Sheep:
- Necrobacillary pododermatitis (Contagious foot rot): Mixed infection involving F. necrophorum with Dichelobacter nodosus as the primary pathogen
- Benign (foot scald) and virulent forms (due to virulent D. nodosus with more proteases)
- Necrobacillosis of the foot: Mixed infection with D. nodosus and F. necrophorum (also Trueperella pyogenes); similar to benign foot rot; abscesses common
- Necrobacillary rumenitis: More aggressive infection than in cattle
- Necrobacillary metritis/placentitis/late-term abortion
- Swine:
- Oral necrobacillosis/necrotic stomatitis: Associated with the trauma of removing needle teeth; bullnose as a sequela
- Necrotic rhinitis (Bullnose): secondary to trauma of the face, nasal, or oral cavities
- Swine dysentery: Synergistic infection with Brachyspira hyodysenteriae and F. necrophorum, resembles salmonellosis
- Horse:
- Necrotizing pododermatitis (Thrush): Necrosis and suppuration of the frog
- Nonhuman primates:
- Noma: A rapidly developing necrotizing stomatitis and gingivitis that may affect the underlying bone; F. necrophorum, Prevotella intermedia and Streptococcus spp. are frequent isolates; usually associated with immunosuppression
- Macropods
- Necrobacillosis lumpy jaw
- Deer:
- Oral necrobacillosis
- Necrobacillary pododermatitis
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