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The Rural Voice, 1983-11, Page 14Peebles Farms Yorkshire /Hampshire Hybrid Gilts Purebred Yorkshire & Hampshire Boars R.O.P. Tested DOUG PEEBLES R.R. 2, Atwood 356-2369 356-2230 Anytime After 6p.m. staff were first seeing the disease, two human patients, who both happened to be pig farmers, developed a similar kind of meningitis. Sanford says both men eventually recovered, without any after-effects. In Europe, where 30 cases of the disease in humans were reported in recent years, half the patients were left deaf in both ears. While researchers are still uncertain exactly how humans contact the disease from pigs, many of the Euro- pean disease victims were butchers. This led medical authorities to postulate the meningitis may have been contacted by handling a pig's carcass when the butchers had cuts or abrasions on their hands. While individual piglets with Strep - suis -type II can be treated fairly quickly with antibiotics, Dr. Sanford says there's no sure method of con- trolling the progression of the disease which seems to repeat itself in the herd, disappearing for up to a year, only to appear again. Although pigs account for about half the lab's business, the veterinarians and technicians see a variety of livestock. One recurring problem they noted in young dairy calves, aged one to two weeks to a month old, coming to the lab was a FRITZ CONCRETE FEEDER SPECIFICATIONS Approximate Weight Height Length Width — 800 lbs Concrete feeder: made to last Galvanized steel grate: extra heavy Zinc coated chains: guaranteed not to bridge feed Will not rust 6 piece construction easily set up in minutes 12 hole feeder: will accom- modate 48 hogs per feeder Galvanized lids available Guaranteed to feed HIGH MOISTURE CORN FRITZ CONCRETE LIMITED 1-111111M4 RR 1 CHEPSTOW ONT. NOG 1K0 (519) 366-2661 NO CHARGE (519 AREA) 1-800-265-3015 PG. 12 THE RURAL VOICE, NOVEMBER 19831 severe, unrelenting diarrhea, formally known as cryptosporidiosis. The coccidial -like bug was so tiny, Dr. Sanford recalls, it took an elec- tron microscope to spot it properly. Again, this is a livestock disease which can also affect humans. The in- itial reports of cryptosporidiosis were noted in immunal deficient patients - people suffering either from leukemia or those who had had heart or kidney transplants. When the disease strikes these patients, the results are fatal. Recently, however, the same organism is being noted in cattle pro- ducers and veterinary science students, but with far less serious results. The disease in these cases resembles a type of gastric flu, San- ford says, with symptoms such as vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal pains, which subside after several days. Finally, the pathologist reports, the organism has been showing up in one other group of hospital patients - those suffering from the relatively new disease AIDS, most often associated with the homosexual com- munity. Cryptosporidiosis is now close to becoming the second major cause of death in AIDS victims, he says. While there's no specific treatment for the disease when it strikes calves, it's another disease spread by fecal/oral contamination when the animals are feeding. Sanitation, again, is the best preventative medicine, combined with some drugs veterinarians are now using to combat the disease, says Dr. Stanford. In addition to his hours in the lab, Dr. Sanford also spends a good deal of time publicizing some of the lab's findings, most notably in swine pathology. In the last year, some of the conferences he addressed include the U.S. Association of Swine Pro- ducers in Des Moines, Iowa; the University of Minnesota Swine Herd Health conference in Minneapolis - St. Paul and the Inter -State Veterinary Medical Association con- vention in Sioux City, Nebraska. His calendar is already filling up with future speaking engagements. Happily, Dr. Ernest Sanford has found his career in pathology has proved as exciting and varied as he dreamed it would be during his stu- dent days. "This is a fantastic challenge, every day is a challenge. I never cease to have new material to work on," he says, with an enthusiasm that's cat- ching when he describes his work. ❑