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MAREK'S SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

Marek’s Disease Marek’s Disease is a viral tumor-causing disease of chickens. Marek’s is distributed worldwide and is so common that if you have birds, they have been exposed to Marek’s, regardless of whether they show symptoms or not. There are 4 different forms of Marek’s: Marek’s Disease is caused by 6 different herpes viruses that primarily affect young birds. The virus concentrates in feather follicles and is shed in dander. Marek’s disease-causing virus particles can survive for months in chicken-house dust and litter. Transmission Marek’s is highly contagious and spreads by bird-to-bird contact, by contact with infected dust and dander, and by darkling beetles and mealworms that live in the chicken house, although the virus has no affect on the beetles or mealworms. Other organisms common to chicken houses such as free-living mites, mosquitoes and coccidia do not transmit the disease. Chickens are most commonly exposed to Marek’s by contact with residual dust and dander in previously infected houses, by aerosol (air) contamination from a nearby house, or by virus particles carried by personnel and equipment. The virus doesn’t survive the incubation process well and is not spread by hatching eggs. Immune transfer from the hen to the chick provides some protection to the chick for the first few days of life. Signs The signs and symptoms of Marek’s Disease vary depending on the form of disease present. Cutaneous form: Enlarged reddened feather follicles and white bumps on the skin that form brown crusty scabs. Neural form: Characterized by one, all, or none of the following symptoms - • Progressive paralysis, usually of the leg or wing, a typical leg-paralysis victim will have one leg extended forward and one leg extended back. A swelling of the sciatic nerve is the cause. • Weight loss • Labored breathing • Diarrhea • Starvation and death due to an inability to reach feed and water and to trampling by penmates. • Cutaneous (skin form) • Neural (nerve form) • Ocular (eye form) • Visceral (internal-organ form) Ocular form: • Gray eye color • Misshapen iris • Weight loss • Blindness • Death Visceral Form: Tumors on internal organs including heart, ovary, liver and lung. Morbidity and mortality Morbidity (number affected) in unvaccinated flocks can reach 60 percent. Vaccinated flocks fare better with less than 5 percent affected. Mortality is high in affected birds reaching nearly 100 percent over a 10-week period. Pullets are more likely to be affected than cockerels. Diagnosis Diagnosis is derived from the flock history, symptoms and necropsy findings. Prevention • Breed for resistance. • Good sanitation and ventilation. • Brood chicks separately from adults until 5 months of age. • Keep turkeys with chickens (this may help the chickens with Marek’s, but can lead to black head disease in the turkeys). • Vaccinate all chicks at 1 day old; keep chicks from exposure until immunity has developed, about 7 days. Treatment None. Cull affected birds. Some birds develop temporary paralysis that disappears after 1-2 days. They appear to return to normal, but frequently die from internal tumors a short time later. For more fact sheets in the small flock poultry management series return to: http://extension.unh.edu/Agric/AGDLEP.htm For more information in New Hampshire: Family, Home & Garden Education Center Toll free Info Line in New Hampshire 1-877-398-4769 M-F • 9 AM - 2 PM W • 5 - 7:30 PM or visit: http://extension.unh.edu/FHGEC/FHGEC.htm For more information in Connecticut: Home & Garden Education Center Toll free Info Line in Connecticut 1-877-486-6271 M-F • 8 AM - 5 PM or visit: http://www.ladybug.uconn.edu/index.html Fact sheet by Tina Savage, UNH Cooperative Extension Agricultural Resources Educator in collaboration with Dr. Michael J. Darre, Professor of Animal Science and Extension Poultry Specialist, University of Connecticut, 8/08 Visit our website: extension.unh.edu UNH Cooperative Extension programs and policies are consistent with pertinent Federal and State laws and regulations on non-discrimination regarding age, color, handicap, national origin, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, or veterans status.#################################################################################################################################################################################################################################################################################### MAREK'S There are five syndromes known to occur after infection with Marek's disease. These syndromes may overlap. Classical Marek's disease or neurolymphomatosis causes asymmetric paralysis of one or more limbs. With vagus nerve involvement, difficulty breathing or dilation of the crop may occur. Besides lesions in the peripheral nerves, there are frequently lymphomatous infiltration/tumours in the skin, skeletal muscle, visceral organs. Organs that are commonly affected include the ovary, spleen, liver, kidneys, lungs, heart, proventriculus and adrenals. Acute Marek's disease is an epidemic in a previously uninfected or unvaccinated flock, causing depression, paralysis, and death in a large number of birds (up to 80 percent). The age of onset is much earlier than the classic form, birds are four to eight weeks old when affected. Infiltration into multiple organs/tissue is observed. Ocular lymphomatosis causes lymphocyte infiltration of the iris (making the iris turn grey), anisocoria, and blindness. Cutaneous Marek's disease causes round, firm lesions at the feather follicles.[2] Atherosclerosis is induced in experimentally infected chickens.[3] Immunosuppression – Impairment of the T-lymphocytes prevent competent immunological response against pathogenic challenge and the affected birds become more susceptible to disease conditions such as coccidiosis and "Escherichia coli" infection .[4] Furthermore, without stimulation by cell-mediated immunity, the humoral immunity conferred by the B-cell lines from the Bursa of Fabricius also shuts down, thus resulting in birds that are totally immunocompromised. Marek's Disease Also known as: MD; Neuritis; Neurolymphomatosis; Range Paralysis (eye form; gray eye, iritis, ocular lymphomatosis, uveitis) Symptoms: The first indication of infection is a variation in the growth rate and degree of feathering. In chicks over 3 weeks old: Most commonly 12 to 30 weeks old Growing thin while eating well (most common form) Deaths starting at 8 to 10 weeks and persisting until 20 to 25 weeks In mature birds (6 to 9 months old): Enlarged reddish feather folicles or white bumps (tumors) on skin that scab over with a brown crust (skin form) Stilted gait or lack of coordination Swelling of the peripheral nerves, particularly of the nerves of the leg and wing, is often noticeable Pale skin Wing or leg paralysis (involves nerves) When both legs are paralyzed, one points forward and the other points back under the body Sometimes rapid weight loss Gaping or gasping Transient paralysis lasting 1 to 2 days (pseudo-botulism form) Dehydration Emaciation Coma Death, due to inability to get to food and water or trampling by other chickens The visceral organs may contain tumors ranging from microscopic size to fairly large. Such tumor lesions may be confused with those of lymphoid leukosis without a qualified laboratory diagnosis. Marek’s symptoms feet first · Limping · Toe’s may be swollen or bent · Unable to weight bear on the foot or leg · No loss of appetite · No visible pain · Just loss of mobility · Usually affects one leg, then a wing · Then it affects both legs, one leg will be stretched out front and the other out the back of the bird (classic position) In breeds with reddish bay eyes: Cloudy, grayish Dilated Irregular pupil ('gray eye, involved optic nerve) Distorted or blinded eye In all ages: Sudden death of apparent healthy birds Treatment: Most people say NONE; to cull the birds Some tumors, particularly those of the feather follicles, clear up and the bird recovers on its own But survivors are carriers of this disease for the rest of their lives On page 2 of this thread is a Pro Biotic Approach to treating Marek's Disease, I have never used it so do not know if it works, it is up to the person reading to decide if they would like to try it Tumor formation from Marek's disease can be prevented through vaccination. Salsbury MD-Vac, a vaccine of chick-embryo tissue culture, is recommended. Vaccination at one day of age usually protects birds through their lifetime. ****** These may be the first symptoms of Marek’s Disease, they usually show up in birds that are young, but this disease has attacked older birds also
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Comments (4)

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tinychicky 2/17/12 at 7:39pm
An excellent artice, seminolewind :)
happycountryhens 3/18/12 at 3:03pm
Very nice and concise. Love it! Unfortunately, also experianced it.
Where do you buy your vaccine? School will be hatching some eggs for me and thinking about ordering from Jeffers - the only place I could find it. Eggs hatch and chicks banded that are coming home with me. Chicks vaccinated and brought home one week later. School is on board with the program.
zibby 4/1/12 at 9:25am
Thanks for the article. I hope it is helpful to others. I wish I had it 8 weeks ago when Merecks first hit my flock. I had 13 chickens in that flock. Now I have 6. Just when I think it is over, another one starts limping and is paralyzed within a day. My other flock has not had any casualties yet, but they were just yards away and I think it is just a matter of time for the youngsters. I am hoping that the older ones will not be symptomatic, but after reading up on this subject all my birds have been exposed and if they haven't died they are carriers and potentially shedding the disease forever. Now, if I don't want to undergo the devestating loss of soooo many birds I have to order my birds directly from the hatchery and have them vaccinated. I did buy vaccine for my last batch of day old feed store birds, but this is not cost effective. No more chicks that just happen to follow me home from the Tractor Supply. I cannot bear to watch them go through this. But if we vaccinate, are we weakening the resistance of the chickens? Now birds that would have died, live perhaps to breed and have chicks that will not have any natural resistance. This seems to me a practical and ethical dillema. Does anyone have any ideas about this? Also why do hatcheries not recommend vaccinations for people ordering small orders of chicks. If I had any idea of the loss both financial and emotional, I would have vaccinated.
seminolewind 4/9/12 at 11:07am
Hi. You can also purchase vaccine at Twincitiespoultry.com . It's fast and cold and at a good price. I like them, I've never ordered from Jeffers yet.
Zibby, Buy day olds from a hatchery who ships them and vaccinated them. They do not recommended because they are behind the times. Their money is behind large buyers. Also, most people do not know that Marek's is killing their birds because the symptoms are soooo varied-not just one leg forward and one leg back. So the hatcheries are kindof short on information. Because of our backyard practices, it's more epidemic than they realize.
If you hatch birds laid by your exposed birds, whether vaccinated or not, they have some resistance. I had 5 silkies hatched and raised by their mama silkies that survived an outbreak and all 5 never died. But they are still carriers.
I got mixed results from hatching mailed eggs in my incubator. They went outside near the flock at 6-8 weeks old and as I look back I only lost 1 out of every hatch. Sometimes I wonder if those mailed eggs were laid by exposed moms, I will never know. But I don't think they could have all been.
I got mailed eggs and hatched them under my exposed silkies, and they all died one by one. That's when I realized my flock carried Marek's.
So, I think, eggs that are laid by your exposed birds carry resistance. Mailed eggs put under your birds will probably die. Mailed vaccinated or day old vaccinated by you and quarantined for 6-10 weeks have a 90% or more chance of living, but will still be exposed and can pass on the virus.
The vaccine does not prevent the birds from getting Marek's. It prevents them from dying from it. They can still catch it and pass it on. But 90% or better won't be growing cancer or suffering nerve damage.
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