Disease Management
Disease control
Coccidiosis, Ranikhet disease, Infectious Bursal disease, Fowl pox, Worms, Ectoparasites, Aspergillosis and Mareks’ disease can affect the chicks. Marek’s disease, Ranikhet disease and Infectious Bursal disease can be prevented, if preventive vaccination programme is practiced. Coccidiosis can be prevented by incorporating a suitable coccidiostat available in the market in the feed at levels recommended by the manufacturers. Eg. Maduramycin, Salinomycin, Amprolium, Monensin. In the event of an outbreak of coccidiosis, administer any one of the following medicines at levels recommended by the manufacturers in consultation with a veterinarian. Bifuran, Coxysol–Amprosol, Codrinal, Sulfadimethylpyrimidine , Sulfaquinoxaline etc.
In addition, strict sanitation, good litter management and adequate floor space will help to check the occurrence of diseases.
Vaccination programme for layer type chicken
Age |
Disease |
Vaccine |
Route |
1. 1 day |
Marek’s |
HVT vaccine |
I/M |
2. 5-7 days |
RD |
Lasota/F |
Occulonasal |
3. 10-14 days |
IBD |
IBD Live |
Drinking water |
4. 24-28 days |
IBD |
IBD Live |
Drinking water |
5. 8th week |
RD |
R2B/RDVK |
S/C |
6. 16-18 week |
RD |
Killed/Live |
S/C |
(Source: Kerala Agricultural University)
Give anti-stress medicaments to combat vaccination stress in consultation with a veterinarian.
Deworming
Birds should be dewormed starting from one week prior to R2B/RDVK vaccination and repeated at 3-week intervals so as to give a total of 4 dewormings before housing at 18 weeks of age. Piperazine compounds, albendazole, mebendazole etc. can be used against round worms. Against tape worms, Niclosamide, Praziquintel, Albendazole can be used.
While medicating through drinking water, it should be done by mixing the required quantity of medicine in the quantity of water that chicks normally consume in 4 hours time (say approximately 6 litres per one hundred, 6 week-old chicks, per day). Additional water should be given only when all the medicated water is consumed by the chicks.
Ectoparasites
The birds should be dusted or dipped and houses fumigated as soon as there is indication of ectoparasites. The following may be used for dusting and dipping. Dipping should be avoided on rainy days. Head dipping has to be avoided.
- Tick tox – synthetic pyrithrine compound. Dose – as per manufacturer’s instructions
- Butox – Deltamethrin compound. Dose – as per manufacturer’s instructions
In addition to these, general measures of sanitation such as keeping young stock away from adult stock, keeping the poultry houses and equipments clean, prohibiting visitors into the poultry house, proper disposal of dead birds, prevention of entry of rodents and other birds into the pen and periodical culling will greatly help in checking diseases.
Disease, Symptoms and Treatment in Poultry birds
Disease, etiological agent and species affected |
Important symptoms |
Specimens to be collected |
Diagnosis |
Control / Treatment |
1. Fowl cholera Poultry, Turkey and Duck |
In acute cases birds may die without showing any symptom. In less severe form breathing rapid- open beak, feather ruffled, comb and wattle become cyanotic. There may be yellowish diarrhoea. In chronic form swollen comb and wattle, joints hot and painful. In duck acute haemorrhagic enteritis and oozing of blood from oral cavity noticed. Sudden death. |
Blood smear from ailing bird, spleen, liver, lung etc. from sacrificed or dead bird in separate cover (on ice), long bones from putrefied carcass in charcoal packing. In chronic case smear from wattle |
Demonstration of orga- nism in blood smear, isolation of organism from internal organs, isolation of the organism from long bone, in chro- nic case it is difficult to demonstrate the organism in blood. Smear from wattle is used, biological method using pigeon |
Treatment: Sulpha drugs and TMP combination, Enrofloxacin are effective. Drugs like Flamequin, Ampicillin, Chloramphenicol, Chlortetracycline and Novobiocin are also used. |
2. Duck septicaemia Ducks & Turkey |
Young ducks (1-8 weeks) are highly susceptible. Listlessness - occular and nasal discharge, mild coughing, sneezing, greenish diarrhoea, ataxia, tremor of head and neck and coma. In certain cases in adult ducks severe haemorrhagic enteritis with septicaemic lesions all over body noticed. Blood seen in the oral cavity at the time of death due to severe congestion of mucous membrane of oesophagus - sudden death noticed. |
Affected bird or internal organs, especially heart, liver, spleen from affected bird in sterile containers (on ice). |
Isolation and identification of the organism, demonstration of the organism in blood smear, in putrefied carcass isolation from long bones. |
Combination of streptomycin and dihydro-streptomycin., suphadimidine sodium in drinking water for 3 days. Flamequin, Chloramphenicol, Enrofloxacin, Ampicillin, Pefloxacin are also effective. |
3. Pullorum Poultry |
Chicks hatched from infected egg, moribund or dead chick may be seen in the incubator. Sometimes disease is not seen for 5-10 days. Peak mortality during second or third week. Affected birds may exhibit a shrill cry when voiding excreta, which is white or greenish brown. Infection spread within the flock for a long time without any distinct signs. Reduction in egg production, fertility and hatchability. |
Ailing bird or freshly dead birds, or spleen, liver and intestine on ice from dead birds. |
Isolation and identification of organism from diseased birds, whole blood agglutination using coloured antigen (not for turkey), tube agglutination test, ELISA, post mortem lesions. In adult, abnormal ovary with misshapen, discoloured ova, pedunculated with thickened wall. |
No treatment is likely to effect complete elimination of carrier from infected birds. |
4. Fowl typhoid (S.gallinarum) Poultry and Turkey |
Seen in young chicken and poults. Symptoms similar to pullorum disease. Birds show diarrhoea and greenish faeces and systemic disturbances. |
Ailing bird or fresh carcass or liver, spleen and intestine from freshly dead birds by special messenger on ice |
Isolation and identification of organism, tube and plate test, clinical observation and necropsy findings (Bronze liver |
Sulpha-TMP drugs, Quinelone group are used. Nitrofurans (Furazolidone) are used with some success. |
5. Paratyphoid infection of birds with Salmonella other than Poultry, Turkey, Ducks and Goose |
Similar to pullorum |
Two ailing birds |
Isolation and identification of organism, clinical observation and autopsy findings, serological tests |
Furazlidone, injectable gentamicin, spectinomycin, and sodium nalidixate are the drugs of choice. Bacterin and attenuated live vaccines are used. |
6. Collibacillosis Poultry, Turkey, Duck |
In acute form, symptoms resemble fowl cholera or fowl typhoid. |
Ailing bird or internal organs in sterile containers through special messenger on ice |
Symptoms, isolation and identification of organism, PM lesions, pericarditis, peritonitis, air saculitis, perihepatitis, septicaemic carcass with liver, spleen, lung, kidney dark and congested. |
Faecal contamination of hatching eggs reduced by fumigating or disinfecting eggs within 2 hours of laying. Antibiotic administration after studying the antibiogram. Furazolidone is fed (0.04%) for 10 days and chlortetracycline in water (600 mg/5 L) for 5 days. Inactivated vaccine from 02:K1 and 078: K SO strains are effective. For ducks, inactivated vaccine prepared from 078 strain is effective. |
7. Infectious coryza (Haemophiluspara gallinarum) |
Affects upper respiratory tract, sero mucoid nasal and occular discharges and facial oedema, conjunctivitis with closed eyes. |
Ailing bird or trachea and lungs in sterile containers on ice. |
Isolation and identification |
Sulpha drugs plus TMP, streptomycin, tetracycline, chloramphenicol, quinolone 2nd generation. |
8. Erysipelas (Erysipeolothrix insidiosa) Turkey & Chicken. |
Sudden death, especially in toms. Cutaneous lesions may be seen. Affected males have swollen discoloured turgid snood and dewlap. |
Ailing bird, piece of liver, spleen in sterile vials on ice, bones of putrefied birds in charcoal, impression smears (from liver, spleen and heart blood smear. |
Sudden loss of adult turkey in flesh with septicaemic lesions, isolation and identification of organism, bone marrow culture in putrefied carcass, agglutination test. |
Crystalline penicillin is the drug of choice. Erythromycin and broad-spectrum antibiotics are also effective. Aluminium hydroxide absorbed whole cell of E.insidiosa (serotype 2) is effective. |
9. Chronic respiratory disease (CRD) Mycoplasma gallisepticum Chicken and |
Nasal discharge, shaking of head, coughing, swelling of the orbital sinuses and tracheal rales. |
Ailing bird or trachea, air sac, turbinates and lung in sterile container from dead bird (on ice). |
Symptoms, isolation and identification of organism, rapid serum plate test, HI test, ELISA |
Chlortetracycline, tylosin, streptomycin, erythromycin or lincomycin can be tried. But some strains are resistant to tylosin, streptomycin, erythromycin or spiromycin. Dipping of egg prior to hatching in tylosin or chlortetracycline is advised for controlling the infection.
|
10. Gangrenous dermatitis (Clostridium septicum, Poultry |
Varying degree of depression, incoordination, leg weakness, ataxia, dark moist areas of skin devoid of feathers, overlying wings, breast, abdomen and leg, extensive blood tinged oedema with or without gas is present beneath the affected skin. |
Ailing birds, swab collected from affected area. |
Clinical symptoms and lesions, isolation and identification of organism |
No treatment is completely successful. Chlortetracycline, Oxytetracycline, Bacitracin, penicillin, copper sulphate in drinking water. Furaxone in feed |
11. Psittacosis/ Parrots and other psittacine birds, domestic poultry, turkey and ducks. Transmissible to man |
Ruffled plumage, nasal discharge, watery greenish diarrhoea, pasting of feathers, wasting of pectoral muscles, nervous symptoms, respiratory symptoms. |
Two ailing birds, impression smears from cut surfaces of liver, spleen, air sac impression smears |
Clinical symptoms, P.M.findings, microscopical examination, impression smears, after modified ZN staining isolation and identification of the organism, CFT. |
Broad-spectrum antibiotics, chlortetracycline 500-800 g/tonne of feed for 3 weeks. Doxycycline also tried |
(Source: Kerala Agricultural University)
Vaccination Schedule for Poultry birds
Animal |
Diseases |
Age and Booster dose |
Route |
Remark |
Broilers |
Ranikhet disease (Newcastle disease) |
1-7 days |
Spray / occulonasal drops |
Strain F or Bl or LaSota. |
Infectious bronchitis |
3-4 weeks |
Spray / drinking water. |
Strain La Sota. |
|
Infectious bursal disease |
18-21 days |
Spray / drinking water |
If maternal antibody is low. |
|
Marek’s disease |
5-10 days or |
Drinking water. |
|
|
Broiler and layer breeders |
Marek’s disease |
day-1 |
i/m |
If the bird s are to be kept for more than 60 days. |
RD |
day-1 |
i/m |
|
|
|
1-7 days |
Spray/ occulonasal drops. |
If mesogenic strain. |
|
|
3-4 weeks |
Spray/drinking water |
If lentogenic strain (La Sota) |
|
|
8 weeks |
Drinking water |
Killed vaccine/ mesogenic strain |
|
|
16-18 weeks |
i/m |
|
|
Broiler and layer breeders |
Fowl pox |
6 – 8 weeks |
Wing web s/c or i/m |
Cell culture vaccine |
Fowl cholera |
6 weeks |
0.5 ml s/c |
|
|
Infectious bronchitis |
3 weeks |
Drinking water/spray i/m |
Killed vaccine. |
|
Infectious bursal disease |
3 weeks |
Drinking water i/m |
Chicks between 5-7 days can be vaccinated if required with highly attenuated strains. |
|
Commercial layers |
Marek’s disease |
Day 1 |
i/m |
|
Ranikhet disease |
1-7 days |
spray/ occulonasal drops/drinking water |
If mesogenic |
|
Infectious bursal disease |
40th week |
Drinking water |
|
|
Infectious bronchitis |
3 weeks |
Drinking water |
|
|
Infectious coryza |
3 weeks |
Drinking water |
Killed vaccine |
|
EDS – 76 |
3 weeks |
Drinking water/spray |
|
|
ILT |
16 weeks |
i/m |
|
|
Duck breeders/ commercial duck |
Duck plague |
9 weeks |
s/c |
Killed vaccine |
|
Duck hepatitis |
2-4 weeks |
i/m or s/c |
May be repeated 4-5 months interval |
|
Duck pasteurellosis |
9 weeks |
i/m |
For duck pasteurellosis killed vaccine is to be prepared from duck isolates. Dose same as in poultry. |
(Source: Kerala Agricultural University)