BLACK QUARTER DISEASE

Synonyms

  • Black leg
  • Quarter ill
  • Symptomatic anthrax

Etiology

  • Caused by Clostridium chauvoei

Susceptible Hosts

  • Cattle are the most susceptible host.

Mode of transmission

  • The disease spreads from contaminated soils.
  • The organisms gain entry through ingestion of infected feeds or possibly through contamination of wounds.

Clinical findings

  • Incubation period: 2-5 days
  • Muscles degenerate and gases are evolved.
  • Loss of appetite, suspended rumination, stiffness or lambness in one of the limbs
  • Characteristics swelling develops in the thick layer of muscle, common site are thigh, buttock, shoulder, neck and lumbar region
  • Muscle fibres swollen dark in colour and dry\
  • Spongy texture due to gas pockets
  • Pressure on swelling gives crackling or crepitating sound
  • Skin over the swelling area becomes discoloured and dry
  • Laboured breathing, increased pulse rate, temperature drops
  • Animal dies within 12-48 hrs

Diagnosis

  • Tentative diagnosis from history and clinical signs
  • Confirmatory diagnosis from microscopic examination of smear, smear from affected tissue and fluids
  • Cultural test using modified reinforced clostridial agar, broth medium, tryptose soy agar
  • Biological test using G. pig
  • Serological test like FAT, ELISA, double immune diffusion

Differential diagnosis

  • Anthrax
  • Malignant edema
  • Bacillary haemoglobinuria
  • Lightening stroke
  • Lactationaltetany

Treatment

  • penicillin- 10000-22000 iu/kbw
  • Antihistaminics- 10 ml
  • Analgesics and antipyretics- 15 ml
  • Dexamethasone- 5ml

Vaccination

  • inactivated cl. Chauvoei antigens adsorbed in aluminium hydroxide gel
  • Dose- cattle, buffalo - 2ml s/c
  • Primary vaccination- 6 months or above
  • Revaccination annually

RAKSHA HS, BQ