1Department of Veterinary Pathology, VCRI, Orathanadu, Thanjavur-614 625
2Department of Veterinary Microbiology, VCRI, Orathanadu, Thanjavur-614 625
3Veterinary Clinical Complex, VCRI, Orathanadu, Thanjavur-614 625
Department of Veterinary Pathology, Veterinary College and Research Institute, Namakkal-637 002, Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, Chennai-600 051
*Address for Correspondence M. Sasikala, Assistant Professor, Department of Veterinary Pathology, Veterinary College and Research Institute, Namakkal-637 002, Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, Chennai-600 051, India, E-mail: vetsasi.pathologist@gmail.com
Online published on 11 August, 2025.
In the present article, the pathology of sheep pox in a Mecheri sheep flock has been described. Six adult sheep carcasses from an organized sheep farm were presented for necropsy. Affected sheep had clinical signs of pyrexia, conjunctivitis, laboured breathing, loss of appetite and raised firm nodules in the hairless areas all over the body. On necropsy, skin over the groin, ventral abdomen and inner thigh revealed multiple, round, firm, elevated grey-coloured nodules. Lung lobes revealed many reddish-brown circular areas. Microscopically, hyperplasia with hydropic degeneration of the lining epithelium was observed in tissues of skin, lip, rumen and reticulum. Eosinophilic intracytoplasmic inclusions also seen in hyperplastic epithelial cells of the above tissues. Trachea showed mucosal congestion with subacute tracheitis, epithelial hyperplasia with intracytoplasmic inclusions and lungs showed interstitial pneumonia. Tissues with lesions were subjected to polymerase chain reaction and were found to be positive for ITRs of the sheep pox virus with an amplicon size of 289 bp. The disease was diagnosed as sheep pox on the basis of gross pathology, histopathology and confirmation by molecular methods.
Mecheri sheep, Pathology, Sheep pox, Tamil Nadu