|
Authors: Gretchen Kaufman, DVM, Richard Jakowski, DVM,PhD,DACVP
| Color Key |
|
Important key words or phrases. |
|
Important concepts or main ideas.
|
1. Learning Objectives
- Know the clinical significance of yeast infections in pet
birds and poultry
- Be able to recognize, diagnose and treat avian gastric yeast
in a bird
- Understand the relationship of stress and disease to the
development of aspergillosis in wild and pet birds
- Be able to develop diagnostic and treatment plans for
suspected aspergillosis infection in a bird
2. Candidiasis
(Candida
albicans)
Candidiasis is an intestinal tract disease primarily
affecting the upper intestinal tract (especially the crop) of all species of
birds and is caused by Candida albicans. It is often seen
secondary to other debilitating disease and is more common in young birds.
C. albicans is a normal inhabitant of the digestive
tract and results in disease when there has been some derangement of the normal
floral inhabitants. The main causes of candidiasis are parasitism,
nutritional deficiency, starvation, other infectious diseases, poor sanitation
and antibiotic use. Although the crop is the most frequent site of infection,
the mouth, pharynx and esophagus are sometimes involved as well as lower
reaches of the GI tract (infrequently).
2.1. Candidiasis in pet bird species
Candidiasis is most important in young
unweaned birds. It is often referred to as "sour
crop". It most often develops secondary to a crop motility disorder,
antibiotic therapy, and/or systemic disease. One should
routinely use antifungal agents when using antibiotics in baby
birds. Candidiasis is also seen as a secondary infection with
tetracycline therapy for chlamydiosis. It is most often seen with tetracycline
and chlortetracycline, but is less of a problem with doxycycline.
Clinical signs in pet birds usually include anorexia,
weight loss, regurgitation and crop stasis. Diagnosis is based on clinical
signs and demonstration of the organism on cytology and/or culture of a crop
wash, pharyngeal swab, or fecal smear. Budding yeast will be seen as strongly
Gram (+) with a gram stain.
Principles of treatment dictate that one must resolve
the underlying disorder, not just treat the fungal infection. Effective drugs
for candidiasis include: Nystatin, ketoconazole,
itraconazole and fluconazole.
2.2. Candidiasis in poultry
Clinical signs of candidiasis in
poultry are often non-specific. Most of the time nothing is
seen other than retarded growth, listlessness, ruffled feathers and
diarrhea.
Pre-mortem diagnosis can be done by demonstrating the
organism as for pet birds. Post-mortem diagnosis is based on the following:
involved mucous membranes are usually thickened, with a tan/grey,
pseudomembranous appearance. Plaques of sloughed pseudomembrane and soft,
cheesy material may be evident in the lumen of the crop. C.
albicans may be difficult to identify, even in histologic section. It
is often useful to make impressions or swabs of the suspected lesion.
C. albicans is a dimorphic organisms which can appear in
filamentous or yeast form. The yeast form resembles large, variable-sized, gram
positive cocci that are sometimes confused with staphylococci.
Treatment in poultry may include use of aqueous
solutions of gentian violet, and copper sulfate (flock) or nystatin (individual
bird). Prevention is optimal.
3. Avian gastric yeast
Macrorhabdus ornithogaster? Cryptococcus
magnus?
Avian gastric yeast, as yet not
definitively classified, is an enteric fungal disease seen in budgies, other
psittacines, canaries, finches, turkeys, quails, ducks, geese, ibis and
ostriches producing chronic wasting and eventual death. The
organism was originally classified as a giant bacteria called "megabacteria"
and very recently confirmed as a fungi. The organism is thought to colonize the
proventriculus, elevating the pH and altering the physiology of the stomach
disrupting the thick, acellular koilin layer found in this portion of the avian
GI tract. Malabsorption/maldigestion results in a wasting syndrome.
Koilin is a carbohydrate-protein
complex secreted by the mucosal glands and surface epithelium of the
ventriculus. This material hardens in the upper and middle layer of the
secretion as a result of exposure to hydrochloric acid secreted by the
proventriculus. In the absence of normal HCl secretion, the koilin layer does
not form properly.
The organism is Gram positive and can easily be seen on
gram stain preparations of feces, or a proventricular wash. They are very long
(1 x 90 mm), very difficult to culture, and resistant to all known antibiotics.
Treatment with acidification of the GI tract (vinegar, grapefruit juice) and
the antifungal agent amphotericin B orally (100 mg/kg PO) has been effective in
some cases. Spontaneous recovery has also been reported but prognosis may be
very poor.
4. Aspergillosis
(most often Aspergillus
fumigatus)
Aspergillosis is a serious disease in
captive raptors, captive penguins, marine birds and waterfowl, as well as
psittacines and poultry. Fungal diseases in birds are almost
always opportunistic and secondary to immunosuppression from chronic stress,
other primary diseases (e.g. bacterial, viral, nutritional), severe
debilitation, excessive use of antibiotics, or an underlying anatomic or
functional disorder (GI motility problem). It can also occur in the presence of
high concentrations of the organism in the environment (dirty chicken house,
organic litter).
Many marine birds are predisposed to the development of
aspergillosis in captivity due to a combination of factors including stress and
immune suppression, housing in facilities with inadequate air exchange and
overcrowding. These birds should be given prophylactic intraconazole
while in captive care.
In poultry aspergillosis is most commonly associated
with baby chicks and turkey poults less than 3 weeks of age. Infection usually
follows the inhalation of fungal spores from dirty incubators (brooder
pneumonia), wet saw dust litter or contaminated feed. Respiratory infection is
most common under these conditions but conjunctival infections can sometimes
occur if the cornea has been injured by high ammonia levels in the air close to
the litter. In addition to the lung and air sacs, the brain and posterior
chamber of the eye may be colonized with fungal hyphae.
4.1. Clinical signs
The infection in most birds usually presents itself as
air sacculitis or granulomatous
pneumonia. It can involve any areas of the respiratory tract
including the sinuses, choana, pharynx, trachea, air sacs and lung parenchyma.
It is also capable of invading other visceral organs as an extension of air
sacculitis or through hematogenous spread. Conversely it may occur only in
localized form (e.g fungal rhinitis).
4.2. Diagnosis
Diagnosis is based on clinical signs, hematology,
radiographs, laparoscopy, serology (antigen and antibody), and finally culture.
Serology tests are not foolproof but are extremely helpful especially when used
with protein electrophoresis. Paired samples are recommended.
Currently, making a clinical diagnosis of aspergillosis can be very
difficult!
4.3. Treatment
Successful treatment is based on early
diagnosis. Unfortunately, the disease has often progressed too
far by the time diagnosis is made (radiographic lesions). Various systemic
antifungal drugs that are efficacious include: amphotericin
B and flucytosine (combination therapy), and newer generation
imidazoles such as itraconazole, enilconazole, and
fluconazole. Recent evidence suggests that the new agent
terbinafine (Lamisil) may be more effective than any of the
imidazoles. Methods of therapeutic administration will vary, depending on the
location of the disease and situation. Nebulization (amphotericin B,
enilconazole) is very useful as an adjunctive therapy in treating respiratory
tract disease. All cases require prolonged therapy and very close monitoring to
produce successful results. Prognosis is generally poor except for very
localized infections.
5. Ancillary Material
5.1. Readings
5.1.1. Texts and Articles
Altman, Robert B., et al. Avian Medicine and
Surgery. Philadelphia. W.B. Saunders Co., 1997. Chapter 20.
Dahlhausen, Bob, JG Lindstrom and CS Radabaugh. The
use of terbinafine hydrochloride in the treatment of avian fungal disease.
Proceedings of the 21st Annual Conference of the Association of
Avian Veterinarians, Portland, Oregon, August 30 - September 1, 2000 : 35-39.
Ritchie, Branson W., et al. Avian Medicine:
Principles and Application. Lake Worth, Fla., c1994: Chapter 35
|