Difference between revisions of "Category:Rickettsiales"

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===Feline infectious anaemia===
+
[[Mycoplasma haemofelis]]
 
 
*Caused by ''Mycoplasma haemofelis ( ''until recently, known as'' Haemobartonella felis)
 
*Organism found on surface of erythrocytes
 
*Common in roaming tom-cats of 1-3 years old
 
*Possibly transmitted via bite wounds or arthropods
 
*Recoverd cats become carriers
 
 
 
*Clinical signs
 
**Peracute disease is associated with severe anaemia and immunosuppression, and can be rapidly fatal
 
**Fever, anaemia, depression, weakness and jaundice occur in the acute form
 
**Anaemia, lethargy and weight loss occur in the chronic form
 
**Recovery can occur with a regenerative bone marrow response
 
**Severe feline infectious anaemia may occur in the presence of feline leukaemia virus
 
 
 
*Diagnosis
 
**Organism intermittently seen on the surface of red blood cells in Giemsa-stained blood smears
 
**Immunofluorescence of blood smears
 
**Reduced packed cell volume; regenerative anaemia
 
 
 
*Treatment
 
**Doxycycline for 3 weeks early in the course of the disease
 
**Blood transfusion
 
**Flea control
 
  
 
===Canine haemobartonellosis===
 
===Canine haemobartonellosis===

Revision as of 20:34, 14 May 2010



Overview

  • Cause systemic diseases in animals
  • Usually use arthropod vectors
  • Host and cell type specificity
  • Q fever and Rocky Mountain spotted fever are zoonoses

Characteristics

  • Non-motile, pleomorphic Gram-negative organisms
  • Obligate intracellular pathogens
  • Require live cells for culture such as tissue culture cells or embryonated eggs
  • Require Romanowsky stains
  • Include two families, Rickettsiaceae and Anaplasmataceae
  • Rickettsiaceae have cell walls that contain peptidoglycan; they target endothelial cells and leukocytes
  • Anaplasmataceae lack cell walls; they target erythrocytes

Epidemiology

  • Rickettsiae replicate in gut epithelial cells of arthropod vectors and spread to other organs such as salivary glands and ovaries
  • Transmission occurs during feeding on the animal host
  • Transovarial or trans-stadial transmission occurs in the arthropod vectors
  • Most ricketsiae have limited survival in the environment, apart from Coxiella burnetii, which undergoes aerosol transmission

Pathogenesis and pathogenicity

  • Many rickettsiae target endothelial cells of small blood vessels; they produce phospholipase which damages phagosome membranes, escaping into the cytoplasm
  • Ehrlichia target leukocytes or platelets, and inhibit phagosome/lysosome fusion
  • Anaplasmataceae localise within vacuoles or on the surface of red blood cells; they may alter red cell antigens causing immune-mediated damage. Anaemia may result from haemolysis or removal of red blood cells

Identification

  • Giemsa-stained blood or tissue smears identify blue/purple organisms
  • Fluorescent antibody technique for specific identification
  • Isolation in embryonated eggs or tissue culture lines
  • Nucleic acid probes and PCR
  • Inoculation of susceptible animals

Rickettsia rickettsii

Ehrlichia canis

Ehrlichia platys



Ehrlichia risticii

Ehrlichia equi

Ehrlichia ondiri

Ehrlichia phagocytophila

Cowdria ruminantium

Anaplasma marginale


Mycoplasma haemofelis

Canine haemobartonellosis

  • Dogs infected with Haemobartonella canis usually asymptomatic
  • Acute haemolytic anaemia may occur in dogs after splenectomy, immunosuppressive drug therapy or immunosuppressive infections


Q fever

  • Caused by Coxiella burnetti
  • Influenza-like disease of humans in contact with farm animals
  • Transmitted to humans by inhalation from parturient sheep, goats and cattle
  • Organisms replicate in female genital tract and mammary glands of ruminants
  • Shedding occurs in uterine discharges, foetal fluid and milk
  • Infections in animals usually subclinical
  • Sporadic abortions occur in sheep, goats, cattle, cats
  • Infertility may result in ruminants, as well as placentitis or endometritis
  • Hepatitis, myocarditis and interstitial pneumonia may occur in affected foetuses
  • Diagnosis: MZN-stained smears of placental tissue and uterine discharges; immunofluorescence; PCR; culture; serology
  • Control: disposal of infected placenta and separation of pregnant ruminants; inactivated vaccines