Studies on the Respiratory Disease `Sonbobe' in Camels in the Eastern Lowlands of Ethiopia

Author: Bekele T.

Source: Tropical Animal Health and Production, Volume 31, Number 6, December 1999 , pp. 333-345(13)

Publisher: Springer

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Abstract:

New epidemics of respiratory disease have caused 29.6 morbidity and 6.4% mortality in camels in the Somalia region of Ethiopia. The major clinical signs observed were fever of 40–41.5°C, depression, cough, loss of appetite and a watery nasal discharge that became mucopurulent at a later stage. Finally, the camel became recumbent and extended its neck straight along the ground. Some of the animals died within 8–9 days. The major post-mortem lesions were hydrothorax, adhesion of the lung to the thorax, red and grey hepatization, emphysema, hydropericardium and fibrinous pericarditis. A treatment trial indicated that oxytetracycline was more effective than a combination of penicillin and streptomycin, the results showing a significant difference (p<0.05) between the treated and control groups. The bacteria isolated from lung, thoracic fluid and whole blood were Pasteurella haemolytica. Further studies on the epidemiology of this disease, the identification of the serotypes involved, and the demonstration of any primary viral initiating agent are recommended to allow the development of preventive methods.

Keywords: antibiotics; camel; Pasteurella haemolytica; pathology; respiratory disease; treatment

Language: English

Document Type: Regular paper

Affiliations: 1: Animal Sciences Department, Alemaya University of Agriculture, PO Box 138, Dire Dawa, Ethiopia

Publication date: 1999-12-01

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