Bacterial pneumonias are often first detected when an animal has died suddenly and is necropsied. Other animals may then be noticed to have signs, including reduced appetite, depression, rapid shallow breathing, coughing and nasal discharge. Dyspnoea (laboured or difficult breathing) may follow minor exertion or rise in temperature as respiratory reserve is reduced.
Nasal and ocular discharge may result from dust, ammonia vapour or fly worry. It can, however, be a result of viral infection of the upper respiratory tract and a prelude to pneumonia.
Pneumonias that cause persistent forced coughing in young sheep and goats can sometimes contribute to prolapse of the rectum.
Most lungworm infections are inapparent. Heavy infections may result in coughing that is reduced following anthelmintic treatment. They are susceptible to most modern drenches.
Necropsy changes have been described in Pneumonia – Cattle.
With bacterial pneumonias the anteroventral lobes are most affected. With viral and Mycoplasma pneumonias, all lobes may be involved with secondary bacteria invading the anteroventral lobes.
With lungworm, the lesions are grey to green nodules scattered throughout the caudal lobes. Sometimes tangles of white threadlike worms up to 5 cm long are found in mucus in the large airways. Lungworm lesions are usually an incidental finding in an animal necropsied for another disease.
Animals that aspirate usually develop severe pneumonia, decline quickly and die within a few days of the aspiration occurring. At necropsy, the anterior of one lung is usually more affected than the other. There is consolidation, liquefaction and involvement of the pleura. The aspirated material can be difficult to recognise.
In the pneumonia of goats, associated with CAE virus, the infection becomes clinical only in older goats. At necropsy, the lungs are grey and firm. Laboratory determination of pathogens requires nasal swabs in transport media for virus detection and isolation, and acute and convalescent sera for virus serology. In dead animals, portions of affected lung should be submitted fixed in buffered formalin for histology and chilled for microbiology and virology.