Transmission
Scrapie is spread through fluid and tissue from the placentas
of infected females. It can be transmitted from an infected
female to her offspring at birth, or to other animals exposed
to the same birth environment. Males can contract scrapie,
but they do not transmit the disease to other animals. A
sheep’s genes affect both its susceptibility to the
disease and the length of the incubation period. At this
time, a correlation between specific genetics and related
scrapie susceptibility has not been determined for goats.
Diagnosis
Scrapie is diagnosed after death by microscopic examination
of the brain tissue, tonsils, lymph nodes, or spleen that
have been treated with a special stain. Biopsies of peripheral
lymphoid tissue from live sheep can accurately identify
certain animals that have scrapie. However, a negative lymphoid
biopsy does not rule out that a particular animal has the
disease.
Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA)
Program
Scrapie is a reportable disease under
the federal Health of Animals Act, and a control program
exists to prevent its spread. As scrapie is a reportable
disease, any suspect scrapie case must be reported to a
CFIA veterinarian immediately. Canadian veterinarians and
livestock producers have been alerted to the symptoms/ signs
of scrapie. When an animal is identified with scrapie, all
the animals that were exposed to the same birthing environment
and are deemed at risk to developing the disease are ordered
destroyed. Producers are compensated for the loss of their
animals. The maximum amount of compensation paid for sheep
ordered destroyed under the Health of Animals Act is 600$.
Sheep that are known to be infected with scrapie are humanely
destroyed, and their carcasses are burned or buried under
CFIA supervision. Owners are compensated for their disposal
costs.
Control Measures
For Owners
Sheep with certain genetic types are less likely to become
infected with scrapie. Blood tests can determine the genetic
profile of a sheep. Producers that want to minimize the
risk of scrapie in their sheep flock can consider selective
breeding for genetic resistance to scrapie. However it should
be remembered that even genetic resistant sheep can get
scrapie.
Alternatively, sheep producers and goat producers can eliminate
or severely restrict the introduction of females and commence
scrapie surveillance by having animals over 12 months of
age that die on their farm tested for scrapie. Specific
efforts towards managing the risk of scrapie on individual
premises can be recognized through formal participation
in a scrapie flock certification program.
In the absence of adopting specific measures to minimize
the risk of scrapie on their farm, a producer is encouraged
to implement general good management and biosecurity practices
such as individual animal identification, record keeping,
prompt isolation of sick animals, separation of females
giving birth, increased cleanliness of birthing environment,
disinfection of equipment between animals and single use
needles for injections. |