NAVLE Nervous · ⏱ 25 min read · 📅 Mar 28, 2026 · by NAVLE Exam Prep Team · 👁 1

Avian Air Sacculitis Study Guide

Overview and Clinical Importance

Air sacculitis (also spelled airsacculitis or aerosacculitis) is a common inflammatory condition of the avian air sacs caused by various microbial pathogens, primarily bacteria and fungi. This condition is clinically significant because birds possess a unique respiratory system with nine air sacs that are essential for respiration, thermoregulation, and vocalization. Unlike mammalian lungs that expand and contract, avian lungs are rigid and non-expansile; instead, air sacs function as bellows to drive unidirectional airflow through the parabronchi where gas exchange occurs.

Air sacculitis represents a significant category on the NAVLE because it affects virtually all avian species and can have substantial economic impact on poultry operations. The condition typically affects birds between 6 and 12 weeks of age and often occurs secondary to primary respiratory infections or immunosuppression. Understanding the unique anatomy of the avian respiratory system is essential for diagnosing and treating this condition.

Air Sac Number Location Clinical Significance
Cervical 2 (paired) Neck region Swelling of neck with infection
Clavicular 1 (unpaired) Thoracic inlet, surrounds heart Connects to humerus; wing drooping possible
Cranial Thoracic 2 (paired) Cranial thorax Anterior air sac group for exhalation
Caudal Thoracic 2 (paired) Caudal thorax Posterior air sac group for inhalation
Abdominal 2 (paired) Caudal coelom, adjacent to oviduct Most commonly affected; adjacent to oviduct (vertical transmission possible)

Avian Respiratory Anatomy Review

The avian respiratory system is fundamentally different from the mammalian system and is considered the most efficient gas exchanger among air-breathing vertebrates. Key anatomical features include:

Key Anatomical Features

  • Rigid, Non-Expansile Lungs: Avian lungs are fixed to the ribs and vertebrae and do not expand during breathing. Gas exchange occurs in the parabronchi, which are rigid tubes with continuous unidirectional airflow.
  • Nine Air Sacs: Four paired air sacs (cervical, cranial thoracic, caudal thoracic, abdominal) plus one unpaired clavicular air sac. These are thin-walled, poorly vascularized structures that do NOT participate in gas exchange.
  • Unidirectional Airflow: Air flows in one direction through the parabronchi during both inspiration and expiration, requiring two complete respiratory cycles for a single breath of air to move through the system.
  • Pneumatic Bones: Some air sacs extend into hollow bones (humerus, femur, vertebrae), which can become infected if air sacculitis spreads.
  • No Diaphragm: Birds lack a diaphragm; breathing is driven by movement of the sternum and ribs. This means abdominal space-occupying lesions (ascites, neoplasia) can cause respiratory compromise.
High-YieldAir sacs are poorly vascularized with thin walls (only 1-2 cell layers thick). This makes them highly susceptible to infection but also means systemic antibiotics have difficulty reaching therapeutic concentrations. This is why nebulization therapy is often essential for treating air sacculitis.

The Nine Avian Air Sacs

Agent Type Most Affected Species Zoonotic Key Treatment
E. coli (APEC) Gram-negative bacteria Poultry (broilers) Yes Fluoroquinolones, based on C/S
Mycoplasma gallisepticum Cell-wall deficient bacteria Chickens, turkeys No Tylosin, tetracyclines, fluoroquinolones
Chlamydia psittaci Obligate intracellular bacteria Psittacines, pigeons, turkeys YES - Reportable Doxycycline x 45 days
Aspergillus fumigatus Opportunistic fungus African Greys, raptors, waterfowl No (but human risk from spores) Itraconazole, voriconazole, surgical debridement

Etiology and Causative Agents

Air sacculitis is most commonly caused by bacterial or fungal pathogens, though viral infections can predispose birds to secondary air sac infections. The most significant causative agents include:

Bacterial Causes

1. Escherichia coli (Colibacillosis)

Avian Pathogenic E. coli (APEC) is the most common cause of air sacculitis in poultry. APEC strains belong primarily to serogroups O78, O1, and O2. The condition is often secondary to viral respiratory infections (Infectious Bronchitis, Newcastle Disease) or Mycoplasma infections that damage respiratory epithelium.

  • Clinical Signs: Respiratory distress, rales, depression, decreased feed intake, fibrinopurulent air sacculitis, pericarditis, perihepatitis
  • Gross Pathology: Foamy to caseous exudate in air sacs, fibrinous pericarditis, perihepatitis (fibrin on liver capsule)
  • Zoonotic Potential: APEC can be transmitted to humans; practice biosafety precautions

2. Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG)

MG causes Chronic Respiratory Disease (CRD) in chickens and Infectious Sinusitis in turkeys. It is the most pathogenic avian Mycoplasma and commonly predisposes birds to secondary colibacillosis. MG lacks a cell wall, making beta-lactam antibiotics ineffective.

  • Clinical Signs: Respiratory rales, coughing, nasal discharge, frothy eyes, infraorbital sinusitis (especially turkeys)
  • Transmission: Vertical (transovarian) and horizontal (respiratory aerosols, fomites)
  • Key Point: Infected birds remain carriers for life; stress causes recurrence

3. Chlamydia psittaci (Avian Chlamydiosis/Psittacosis)

ZOONOTIC DISEASE - Reportable. Chlamydia psittaci is an obligate intracellular gram-negative bacterium that causes systemic disease with respiratory, hepatic, and splenic involvement. Most common in psittacines but affects all bird species.

  • Clinical Signs: Respiratory distress, lethargy, green droppings (biliverdinuria), coelomic distension, conjunctivitis
  • Gross Pathology: Hepatomegaly, splenomegaly (3-4x normal), thickened air sacs, pericarditis, perihepatitis
  • Human Risk: Causes flu-like illness to severe pneumonia in humans; immunocompromised at highest risk
High-YieldChlamydia psittaci replicates in the lungs, air sacs, and pericardial membrane within 24 hours of exposure. It appears in the bloodstream within 48 hours and can be transmitted within 72 hours. Treatment is doxycycline for 45 days continuously because the organism only dies during active division, and its lifecycle includes dormant periods.

Fungal Causes

Aspergillosis

Aspergillus fumigatus is the most common fungal cause of air sacculitis, followed by A. flavus and A. niger. Aspergillosis is an opportunistic infection occurring in immunocompromised birds or those exposed to large quantities of spores (moldy feed, bedding, poor ventilation). It is NOT contagious bird-to-bird.

  • Forms: Acute (brooder pneumonia in young birds) or Chronic (older birds with immunosuppression)
  • Clinical Signs: Voice change (pathognomonic for syringeal involvement), dyspnea, depression, anorexia, emaciation
  • Gross Pathology: White to yellow-green plaques/granulomas in air sacs, lungs, trachea, or syrinx; mold-like lesions
  • Predisposed Species: African Grey Parrots, Amazon Parrots, Raptors (especially stressed), Waterfowl, Penguins
NAVLE TipA change in voice (hoarseness, loss of vocalization) in a psittacine bird is almost pathognomonic for syringeal aspergillosis. The syrinx is located at the bifurcation of the trachea (between T2-T3) and is a common site for fungal granuloma formation.

Etiological Agents Summary Table

Test Findings/Interpretation Best For
CBC Leukocytosis, heterophilia, monocytosis (bacterial); leukopenia (viral). Non-regenerative anemia in chronic cases. Screening; differentiating bacterial vs viral
Biochemistry Elevated AST, bile acids with hepatic involvement. Hyperproteinemia, hypergammaglobulinemia with chronic infection. Assessing organ involvement
Cytology Heterophils, macrophages (bacterial); fungal hyphae (septate, 45-degree branching for Aspergillus); inclusion bodies (Chlamydia). Rapid identification of fungal vs bacterial
Culture Definitive identification and sensitivity testing. Samples from air sac lavage, biopsy, or swabs. Aspergillus is ubiquitous - isolation alone does not confirm disease. Definitive diagnosis, guiding treatment
PCR Rapid, specific detection of Chlamydia, Mycoplasma, Aspergillus DNA from swabs, blood, or tissue samples. Chlamydia, Mycoplasma confirmation
Serology Paired titers (4-fold increase) for Chlamydia, Mycoplasma. Single titers less useful due to carrier states. Serum agglutination for MG screening. Flock screening, monitoring treatment response

Clinical Signs and Physical Examination

Clinical signs of air sacculitis vary depending on the causative agent, severity, and chronicity. Many birds can have advanced air sac disease before showing obvious clinical signs due to the efficiency of the avian respiratory system. Signs may be subtle or masked by concurrent diseases.

Respiratory Signs

  • Dyspnea and tachypnea (open-mouth breathing in severe cases)
  • Tail bobbing with each breath
  • Inspiratory or expiratory stridor, wheezing
  • Respiratory rales and clicking sounds on auscultation
  • Voice change (hoarseness, loss of vocalization) - especially with syringeal involvement
  • Nasal or ocular discharge

Systemic Signs

  • Depression, lethargy, ruffled feathers
  • Anorexia and weight loss
  • Feather plucking or poor feather condition
  • Green droppings (biliverdinuria - associated with hepatic involvement)
  • Exercise intolerance, inability to fly
  • Swelling of the lower neck (cervical air sac involvement)
  • Unilateral wing droop (clavicular or humeral air sac involvement)

Exam Focus: Auscultation is less useful in birds than mammals due to rapid respiratory rate and lack of typical lung sounds. However, abnormal crackles, clicks, or wheezes can indicate air sac disease. The respiratory rate should be assessed while the bird is at rest in a cage (normal: 20-40 breaths/min for larger birds, up to 60-80 for smaller species).

Causative Agent First-Line Treatment Important Considerations
E. coli (APEC) Enrofloxacin 15 mg/kg PO BID; Amoxicillin-clavulanate based on culture/sensitivity High antimicrobial resistance; always culture. Nebulization helpful.
Mycoplasma spp. Tylosin 10-40 mg/kg PO/IM; Enrofloxacin; Doxycycline No cell wall - beta-lactams ineffective. Reduces shedding but does not eliminate infection. Carriers for life.
Chlamydia psittaci Doxycycline 25-50 mg/kg PO SID x 45 days; or LA doxycycline IM weekly x 6 weeks MUST treat for 45 days continuously. Organism dormant periods require extended treatment. Cannot guarantee elimination.
Aspergillus spp. Itraconazole 10 mg/kg PO SID; Voriconazole 10-12 mg/kg PO BID (raptors); Nebulization with clotrimazole Treatment 4-6 months minimum. Surgical debridement of granulomas via endoscopy essential. Monitor hepatic enzymes.

Diagnostic Approach

No single test can diagnose air sacculitis definitively. Diagnosis relies on a combination of clinical history, physical examination, imaging, endoscopy, and laboratory testing. Endoscopy is the gold standard for visualizing air sac lesions and obtaining samples for culture and cytology.

Imaging

Radiography

Lateral and ventrodorsal whole-body radiographs should be part of the routine examination of most ill birds. Air sacs are normally invisible on radiographs because they contain only air.

  • Air sac thickening: Normally invisible air sac walls become visible when thickened/inflamed
  • Soft tissue opacity: Loss of normal air sac radiolucency; cloudiness within air sac space
  • Granulomas: Focal nodular soft tissue opacities within air sacs (common with aspergillosis)
  • Loss of honeycomb pattern: Normal lung architecture obscured in pneumonia
  • Hepatomegaly/Splenomegaly: Associated with systemic infections like chlamydiosis

Endoscopy (Coelioscopy)

Gold standard for diagnosis. Allows direct visualization of air sacs, lung surfaces, and internal organs. Enables collection of samples (biopsy, cytology, culture) under direct visualization.

  • Normal findings: Thin, transparent air sac membranes with minimal vasculature
  • Abnormal findings: Thickened/opaque membranes, increased vascularity, exudate, plaques, granulomas, fungal colonies
  • Technique: Bird anesthetized, positioned in lateral recumbency; endoscope inserted caudal to last rib into left abdominal air sac

Laboratory Diagnostics

Treatment

Treatment success depends on early diagnosis, identification of the causative agent, and addressing underlying immunosuppression. The poor vascularization of air sacs makes systemic therapy alone often insufficient; nebulization therapy is frequently essential for delivering drugs directly to respiratory tissues.

General Supportive Care

  • Stabilization: Oxygen therapy, warm environment, stress reduction before diagnostics
  • Fluid therapy: Crystalloids SC, IV, or IO at 50-150 mL/kg/day for maintenance
  • Nutritional support: Gavage feeding if anorexic; correct vitamin A deficiency
  • Air sac cannula: Emergency procedure for severe upper respiratory obstruction - insert tube caudal to last rib into abdominal air sac

Antimicrobial Therapy by Causative Agent

Nebulization Therapy

Nebulization delivers medications directly to air sacs and respiratory tissues, bypassing the poor vascularization of air sac membranes. This is a stress-free method of drug delivery and is particularly valuable for aspergillosis and bacterial infections.

  • Frequency: 2-3 times daily for 15-20 minutes per session
  • Antibiotics: Gentamicin, amikacin, enrofloxacin diluted in saline
  • Antifungals: Clotrimazole in propylene glycol, amphotericin B
High-YieldAspergillosis is notoriously difficult to treat because: (1) air sacs are poorly vascularized so systemic drugs don't reach adequate concentrations, (2) granulomas become encapsulated preventing drug penetration, and (3) birds often present late in disease. The best outcomes combine surgical debridement via endoscopy with both systemic and nebulized antifungals for 4-6 months.

Prognosis

  • Bacterial air sacculitis (E. coli, Mycoplasma): Fair to good with early treatment. Birds may become carriers (especially Mycoplasma).
  • Chlamydiosis: Good with proper 45-day treatment; however, latent infection cannot be ruled out and stress may cause recurrence.
  • Aspergillosis: Guarded to poor. Advanced cases with extensive granulomas have poor prognosis. Early, aggressive treatment with surgery improves outcomes. Thickened, scarred air sacs provide environment for recurrence.

Prevention and Control

  • Environmental management: Good ventilation, low ammonia levels (less than 10 ppm), low dust, appropriate temperature and humidity
  • Sanitation: Clean, dry bedding; remove moldy feed; chlorinate water; regular disinfection
  • Biosecurity: All-in/all-out management; quarantine new birds; screen for Mycoplasma and Chlamydia
  • Vaccination: MG vaccines (live attenuated ts-11, F-strain) for commercial poultry. No effective vaccine for aspergillosis.
  • Nutrition: Adequate vitamin A to maintain respiratory epithelium integrity
  • Stress reduction: Stress activates latent infections (especially MG, Chlamydia); minimize handling, overcrowding, temperature extremes

Memory Aids

Air Sac Anatomy: "CCCAT"

Cervical, Clavicular, Cranial thoracic, cAudal Thoracic, Abdominal = 9 total air sacs

Aspergillosis Species Susceptibility: "PAWS"

Psitaccines (African Greys, Amazons), Aquatic birds (penguins), Waterfowl, Stressed raptors

Chlamydia Treatment: "45 DAYS - DON'T STOP"

Doxycycline for 45 days continuously - organism has dormant phases, only killed when actively dividing

Voice Change = "Think SYRINX"

Voice change in a psittacine = Syringeal aspergillosis until proven otherwise. Syrinx is at tracheal bifurcation (T2-T3), common site for fungal granulomas.

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Practice Questions

Test yourself before moving on. Click an answer to reveal the explanation.

Question 1 A 5-year-old male African Grey Parrot presents with a 3-week history of progressive voice change, now unable to vocalize. The owner reports decreased appetite and weight loss over the same period. On physical examination, the bird is thin (BCS 2/5), has mild tail bobbing at rest, and you hear faint clicking sounds on auscultation. Radiographs reveal a soft tissue opacity at the level of the syrinx and thickened air sac walls. The owner mentions the bird was recently boarded at a facility and appeared stressed upon return home. What is the most likely diagnosis and the recommended first-line treatment?

Question 2 Regarding Air sacculitis in Avian species, which of the following statements is most accurate?

Question 3 Regarding Air sacculitis in Avian species, which of the following statements is most accurate?

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