RESUMO
Postmortem examinations of four pine martens which had died as a result of road accidents in Scotland revealed focal, granulomatous lesions in the heart and skeletal muscles of three of them. An immunoperoxidase staining technique showed that the lesions were due to infection with Hepatozoon species. A PCR-based assay was used to confirm the presence of Hepatozoon DNA in the infected tissues. The nucleotide base sequence of the PCR products suggested that the infecting organism was probably a new species of Hepatozoon, most closely related to, but distinct from, Hepatozoon canis. The pine martens were in good physical condition and there was no indication that the infection was causing ill health.
Assuntos
Coccidiose/veterinária , Eucoccidiida/isolamento & purificação , Mustelidae/parasitologia , Miocardite/veterinária , Miosite/veterinária , Animais , Animais Selvagens/parasitologia , Coccidiose/diagnóstico , Coccidiose/epidemiologia , Coccidiose/patologia , DNA de Protozoário/isolamento & purificação , Eucoccidiida/genética , Feminino , Imuno-Histoquímica/veterinária , Masculino , Miocardite/parasitologia , Miocardite/patologia , Miosite/parasitologia , Miosite/patologia , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase/veterinária , Escócia/epidemiologiaRESUMO
Three studies were conducted to investigate the transmission of Neospora caninum between cattle by the oral route. In the first study, six calves were dosed with 10(7)N caninum tachyzoites (NC LivB1) in colostrum and/or milk replacer on four occasions. In the second study, two calves and two cows were fed placental tissues from N caninum -infected cows, and, in the third study, seven uninfected calves were fostered onto N caninum -infected dams. In the first study, all six calves developed antibody responses and five calves developed antigen-specific lymphoproliferation responses, including two calves initially challenged at 1 week of age. No evidence of N caninum infection was found in the brain or heart of these calves by histology or polymerase chain reaction (PCR). In the second and third studies, there was no evidence of N caninum infection in any of the calves and cows. The results confirm that calves up to 1 week of age can be experimentally infected via the oral route, but suggest that this is not an important natural route of transmission for N caninum between cattle.
Assuntos
Doenças dos Bovinos/parasitologia , Doenças dos Bovinos/transmissão , Coccidiose/veterinária , Transmissão Vertical de Doenças Infecciosas/veterinária , Neospora/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Animais , Animais Recém-Nascidos , Anticorpos Antiprotozoários/sangue , Bovinos , Divisão Celular/fisiologia , Coccidiose/parasitologia , Coccidiose/transmissão , Colostro/parasitologia , DNA de Protozoário/química , DNA de Protozoário/isolamento & purificação , Feminino , Lactação , Masculino , Leite/parasitologia , Neospora/genética , Placenta/parasitologia , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , Telencéfalo/parasitologiaRESUMO
The parasite, Neospora caninum is an important cause of abortion in cattle. It is transmitted vertically or horizontally and infection may result in abortion or the birth of a live, healthy but infected calf at full-term. Only a proportion of infected cattle abort and the pathogenesis of abortion is not understood. Groups of cattle were infected with 10(7) N. caninum tachyzoites intravenously at different times relative to gestation. Intravenous inoculation was chosen to reproduce the putative haematogenous spread of N. caninum following either recrudescence of endogenous infection or de novo infection. In all cattle, infection was accompanied by high gamma-interferon and lymphoproliferative responses, and a biased IgG2 response indicating that N. caninum infection is accompanied by a profound Th1 helper T cell-like response. Infection at 10 weeks gestation resulted in foetopathy and resorption of foetal tissues 3 weeks after infection in 5 out of 6 cows. Infection at 30 weeks gestation resulted in the birth of asymptomatic, congenitally-infected calves at full term in all 6 cows, whereas the 6 cows infected before artificial insemination gave birth to live, uninfected calves. These results suggest that the reason some cows abort is related to the time during gestation when they become infected or an existing infection recrudesces.