323 bytes removed ,  15:24, 13 August 2010
Line 57: Line 57:     
===Congenital Transmission===
 
===Congenital Transmission===
Primary infection during pregnancy. As sheep are
+
 
not carnivores, consumption of tissues infected with
+
Apart from ingestion of oocysts in the environment, the only other method of transmission of toxoplasmosis to sheep is vertical spread from mother to foetus during pregnancy. This is because sheep are herbivorous, and do not consume animal tissues containing cysts. The outcome of transplacental infection depends on the stage of pregnancy. Infection in early gestation usually causes foetal death, as the foetal immune system is immature at this stage. In mid-gestation, infection may cause the birth of weak or stillborn lambs, sometimes accompanied by a mummified sibling. Ewes infected in the third trimester normally give birth to infected but clinically normal lambs.
T. gondii bradyzoites contained within tissue cysts
+
 
is not considered to be a route of transmission in
+
As well as in acute infection of the damn, transplacental transmission may occur as a result of recrudescence of an endogenous infection.
these animals. The only other route of transmission
  −
is vertical from mother to foetus during pregnancy
  −
(Buxton and Rodger, 2008). The stage of pregnancy
  −
when transplacental transmission of T. gondii takes
  −
place is important in determining the clinical outcome.
  −
If infection occurs early in gestation, when the
  −
foetal immune system is relatively immature, foetal
  −
death is likely to occur. Infection at mid-gestation
  −
can result in birth of a stillborn or weak lamb which
  −
may have an accompanying small mummified foetus,
  −
whereas infection in later gestation may result in
  −
birth of a live, clinically normal, but infected lamb
  −
(Buxton, 1990). The birth of clinically normal but
  −
infected lambs usually occurs as a result of a primary
  −
infection in the third trimester of pregnancy,
  −
although it is also possible that transplacental transmission
  −
may occur as a result of recrudescence of an
  −
endogenous infection (Trees and Williams, 2005).
      
===Recrudescence of Endogenous Infection===
 
===Recrudescence of Endogenous Infection===
6,502

edits