BORDETELLA BRONCHISEPTICA
If you ever board your cat in a cattery, then it's particularly
important to ensure vaccine protection against possible disease
risks. Cat 'flu is one of the biggest risks in a cattery and
recent research shows that a bacterium called Bordetella
bronchiseptica is responsible for some of these outbreaks.
This is a highly contagious disease of the cat's respiratory
tract and occurs where cats are in close contact with each
other.
Bordetella bronchiseptica (Bb) is a bacterium
closely related to Bordetella pertussis, the cause of
whooping cough in man. It may cause problems either in conjunction
with infection due to the cat ‘flu viruses (feline herpesvirus
or feline calicivirus) or may cause disease entirely in its own
right. It can therefore be termed as a ‘primary pathogen’ in
feline upper respiratory tract disease (FURTD).
Who is at risk?
Some may recognise that the Bordetella bacterium is more commonly
associated with dogs and is one of the main causes of kennel
cough. But, cats in homes with more than three cats, or in boarding
and breeding catteries or rescue shelters are particularly at
risk of disease due to this highly infectious organism. It has
also been shown that this disease will spread from dogs to cats
as well! Bordetella infections can be extremely serious in young
kittens, leading to severe breathing difficulties and rapid death.
Reports of the loss of whole litters of kittens to this infection
are not uncommon.
How is it spread?
The bacterium is transmitted by direct contact with an infected
cat or a contaminated environment, or by aerosol infection through
sneezing or coughing. In addition, during the stress of mothering,
an infected queen can often shed the Bb bacteria, also
putting her kittens at risk.
Signs and symptoms
Signs include sneezing, snuffling, discharge from the nostrils,
swollen glands, depression and fever. Coughing can also occur
in some cats, but it is not as common as with the same infection
in dogs. In the very young and weakened, the disease can prove
to be very serious indeed and prove rapidly fatal.
Prevention and control
Vaccination
There is now an improved vaccination regime available which offers
broader spectrum prevention of cat ‘flu and we recommend
you consider these options if you are to board your pet. The
vaccine offers immunity against Bordetella bronchiseptica for
a full 12 months. This means that even if you leave your cat
in the cattery more than once during the year, it only requires
a single vaccination. It’s literally just a few drops
of vaccine gently trickled into one nostril and your cat is
protected in as little as 72 hours! (Ideally your cat should
be vaccinated at least two weeks before arrival at the cattery). |