Difference between revisions of "Tissue cyst-forming coccidia"

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[[Neospora]]
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==Neospora==
 
*2 main species
 
**''Neospora caninum'' in the dog
 
**''Neospora hughesi'' in the horse
 
 
*Sporulated oocysts measuring just 10μm
 
 
*Oocyst contains 2 sporocysts with 4 sporozoites
 
 
*Route of transmission not fully understood
 
 
*Often misdiagnosed as ''Toxoplasma gondii''
 
**''Sarcocystis'' cysts have thicker walls
 
 
*Infection diagnosed by IFAT, ELISA or PCR
 
**Identification of lesions and organisms in tissue using immunohistochemical staining
 
**Eliminate other causes of abortion first
 
 
'''Life cycle'''
 
*Life cycle similar to ''Toxoplasma gondii''
 
 
*Limited range of warm-blooded intermediate hosts
 
**Asexual reproduction occurs in intermediate host forming tissue cysts
 
 
*Host range of sexual stage is unknown for ''N.caninum''
 
**Intermediate host for ''N.hughesi'' is the horse, but the definitive host is unknown
 
 
*Final host
 
**Dogs pass oocysts
 
**Role not fully understood in pathogenesis
 
**5 day prepatent period
 
**Other wild canids may also act as final definitive hosts
 
 
*Intermediate host
 
**Mostly cattle
 
**Natural infection has been documented in other herbivores
 
 
*Transmission
 
**Transplacental infection occurs in all intermediate hosts and in the canine final host
 
***Transplacental transmission can occur in '''successive pregnancies'''
 
**In cattle, vertical transmission occurs
 
***Post-natal infection occurs but is less common
 
 
'''Pathogenesis'''
 
*Dogs
 
**Occurs mainly in puppies
 
**Causes ascending paralysis, especially of hind limbs, with muscle wasting
 
**Causes sudden collapse due to myocarditis
 
**More than 1 puppy in a litter may be affected, although this may not occur simultaneously
 
**Successive litters affected
 
 
*Cattle
 
**Commonest cause of infectious abortion in dairy cattle
 
**Congenitally infected calves can have encephalomyelitis and paresis
 
**Abortion usually occurs between 5-7 months of gestation but can occur as early as 3 months
 
**No other clinical signs in the cow
 
**Repeat abortions possible in same cow (persistently infected)
 
 
*Horses
 
**Myeloencephalitis
 
**Transplacental infection occurs
 
**Disease only diagnosed in USA
 
 
*''Neospora caninum'' in [[Muscles Inflammatory - Pathology#Protozoa|myositis]]
 
 
'''Prevention and Control'''
 
*Do not allow dogs access to calving cows, placental membranes and aborted or dead calves
 
 
*Do not allow dogs to defecate in cattle feeding areas
 
 
*Identify and cull seropositive cattle, or do not breed from them or their progeny
 
 
*Select seronegative cattle for breeding
 
 
*Vaccinate
 
**Only in the USA
 
**Neoguard or Intervet
 
**Killed protozoal vaccine for healthy, pregnant cows
 
**Dosed in first 3 weeks of pregnancy and then every 3-4 weeks during gestation
 
**Revaccination with 2 doses during each subsequent pregnancy
 
  
 
==Sarcocystis==
 
==Sarcocystis==
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==[[Protozoa Flashcards - Wikibugs#Tissue Cyst Forming Coccidia|Tissue Cyst Forming Coccidia Flashcards]]==
 
==[[Protozoa Flashcards - Wikibugs#Tissue Cyst Forming Coccidia|Tissue Cyst Forming Coccidia Flashcards]]==
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[[Category:Piroplasmida]]

Revision as of 22:40, 9 April 2010

Neospora


Sarcocystis

Sarcocytis Life Cycle Diagram - Dennis Jacobs & Mark Fox RVC
Sarcocytis - Joaquim Castellà Veterinary Parasitology Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Sarcocystis in sheep oesophagus - Adam Cuerden
Equine protozoal myeloencephalitis - Wikimedia Commons
Sarcocystis cruzi - Courtesy of the Laboratory of Parasitology, University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine
  • Most infections are asymptomatic
  • Heavy infections are causes of chronic wasting in large animals, hide condemnation and downgrading of carcasses
  • Sarcocystis should be differentiated from other tissue-cyst forming coccidia
  • There are many species of Sarcocystis which differ in size from microscopic to several centimetres in length
    • S.neurona is an important equine pathogen in the USA
  • Infective cyst in the intermediate host is called a sarcocyst

Life Cycle

  • The individual life cycle of some species is incompletely understood
  • Indirect life cycle
  • Life cycle alternates between the final and the obligatory intermediate host
  • Only one final and one intermediate host
  • Sporulated oocyst has 2 sporocysts containing 4 sporozoites
    • Naked sporocyst usually seen in faeces as the oocyst wall is very delicate
    • Oocyst measures 15μm in length
  • No schizogony in final host
  • Gametogeny occurs deep in subepithelial tissue
  • Faecal oocyst count is low
  • Oocysts are sporulated when passed
    • Difficult to find on faecal examination as the sporocysts are few in number and small
  • Ingestion of sporocyst by intermediate host
    • 2 phases of rapid asexual reproduction in vascular endothelial cells
    • Slow multiplication of bradyzoites in muscle tissue
    • Sarcocyst forms with bradyzoites inside, surrounded by a cyst wall and divided into compartments

Epidemiology

  • Final hosts are carnivores and omnivores
  • Intermediate hosts are herbivores and omnivores
  • Humans are the final host for some species and the intermediate hosts for others
    • Final host for species infecting cattle and pigs
  • Dogs are final hosts for species infecting cattle, sheep, goats, pigs and horses
  • Cats are final hosts for species infecting cattle, sheep and pigs

Pathogenesis

  • Widespread infection but mostly asymptomatic
  • Cause meat inspection losses
  • Experimental infections cause severe, acute pyrexic disease when the organism multiplies in the vascular endothelium
  • Can cause chronic wasting disease in cattle and horses
    • Causes abortion and post-natal disease in sheep
  • Equine protozoal myeloencephalitis
    • Necrotising encephalomyelitis affecting the grey and white matter of the CNS
    • Caused by S.neurona
    • Opossum thought to be the definitive host
    • Horses thought to be accidental hosts
    • Natural intermediate hosts currently unknown
    • Western Blotting shows 50% of horses in the USA are seropositive
    • Risk factors poorly understood
    • Causes spinal cord dysfunction
      • Ataxia and paralysis

Toxoplasma

Toxoplasma gondii - Ke Hu and John Murray
Toxoplasma Sporulated Oocyst - Wikimedia Commons
Toxoplasma Tacchyzoites - Wikimedia Commons
Toxoplasma Life Cycle Diagram - Dennis Jacobs & Mark Fox RVC
Toxoplasma gondii - Courtesy of the Laboratory of Parasitology, University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine
  • Major pathogenic species called Toxoplasma gondii
  • Causes disease in a wide range of animal species including humans
  • Important cause of abortion in sheep
  • Zoonotic
    • Can cause abortion
    • Can cause congenitally aquired defects
  • Forms a sporulated oocyst which is only 10μm
    • Contains 2 sporocysts with 4 sporozoites
  • Transmission through ingesting the intermediate host or via the faecal-oral route

Life Cycle

  • Complex
  • Usually indirect
    • Referred to as facultatively heteroxenous
    • Intermediate host is not essential for completion of the life cycle
  • Gametogony (sexual stage) is host specific for felids
  • Any warm blooded animal can act as a facultative intermediate host
    • Asexual reproduction occurs in the intermediate host forming tissue cysts
    • Intermediate host swallows sporulated oocysts or tissue cysts
    • Can be transferred between intermediate hosts by carnivorism
  • Cats
    • Sporulation occurs in 2-3 days
    • Cats either swallow infective (sporulated) oocysts where Toxoplasma gondii has a prepatent period of 3 weeks
    • Or eat the tissues of an infected intermediate host where Toxoplasma gondii has a prepatent period of 3-10 days
    • Self-limiting infection
    • Oocysts are shed for 1-2 weeks
      • Shedding can occur later if immunity wanes or cat is immuno-compromised
  • Intermediate host
    • 3 sources of infection
      • Oocysts from environment contaminated by cat faeces
      • Eating cysts in tissues of other infected hosts through carnivorism or undercooked meat
      • Transplacental transmission in some host species during the acute phase of infection
  • Acute phase of infection
    • After infection of the intermediate host the organism undergoes a phase of rapid division and dissemination throughout the body
      • Parasite enters cell and asexual reproduction occurs by endodyogeny (budding) producing 8-16 tachyzoites
      • Tachyzoites are released when host cell bursts
      • Haematogenous spread as more cells are infected
      • Infection continues until the animal develops immunity (around 2 weeks) at which point the infection enters the chronic phase
  • Chronic phase of infection
    • Occurs once the host's immune response has become effective
      • Groups of slow growing intracellular bradyzoites become walled off forming infective cysts
      • Bradyzoites inside cysts are protected from the host immune response whereas extracellular tachyzoites are killed
      • Cysts remain viable for months to years and are particularly numerous in muscle and nervous tissue
      • If immunity is suppressed the infection can revert to the acute form

Pathogenesis

  • Cat
    • In the intestinal phase of infection only the superficial cells at the tips of the villi are affected
    • Little significant pathogenicity
  • Sheep
    • Mostly asymptomatic
    • However, if a non-immune ewe is infected during pregnancy the consequences will be serious
      • Infection during the first trimester leads to resorption
    • Infection during the second trimester leads to foetal death and mummification
    • Infection during the last trimester leads to a weak or stillborn lamb
    • Aborted ewes show focal necrotic placentitis with white lesions in the cotyledons and foetal tissue
    • Diagnosis is confirmed by Giemsa and serology of the ewe's blood
  • Clinical outbreaks of toxoplasmosis are sporadic
    • Immunity is acquired before tupping
    • Significant ill-effects are unlikely if immune ewes are infected during pregnancy
    • Not shed from sheep to sheep so predicting outbreaks is difficult
  • Humans
    • Mostly asymptomatic
    • Virulent strains cause flu-like symptoms, malaise and/or lymphadenopathy
    • In immunodeficient patients, disease can even be caused by avirulent strains
    • If a non-immune women is infected during pregnancy, abortion or the birth of a congenitally infected child can result
      • E.g. Hydrocephalus, opthalmitis, mental retardation
  • Dogs
    • Complication of canine distemper
    • Causes pneumonia and encephalitis
  • Cattle and horses
    • Sometimes infectious causing opthalmitis

Epidemiology

  • Serology
    • Sabin-Feldman Dye test (old method)
    • ELISA
    • Mouse inoculation for confirmation
  • Cat
    • 30-80% test seropositive
    • Each cat sheds oocysts for 1-2 weeks of its life
  • Human
    • 30% seropositive in UK, 70% seropositive in France
  • Meat animals
    • Significant proportion of cattle, sheep, pigs and rabbits can tissue cysts

Prevention

  • Cat
    • Impossible if cat is allowed outdoors due to hunting
    • If kept indoors, only canned food should be fed and vermin controlled
    • ELISA to check if seropositive
  • Human
    • Avoid oocyst ingestion
      • Wash potentially contaminated raw food thoroughly
      • Wash hands after gardening or handling cats and especially before eating
      • Clean out cat litter trays every day before oocysts sporulate
    • Avoid ingestion of tissue cysts
      • Do not eat undercooked meat
      • Wash hands after handling raw meat
      • Take care when lambing or dealing with sheep abortions and stillbirths
      • Pregnant women should avoid lambing altogether
  • Sheep
    • Toxovax vaccine
      • Live, avirulent strain of Toxoplasma
      • Does not form bradyzoites or tissue cysts
      • Killed by host immune system
      • Single dose given 6 weeks before tupping
      • Protects for 2 years
      • Immunity boosted by natural challenge
    • Medicated feed can be given daily during the main risk period
      • 14 weeks before lambing
    • The best method of protection is to prevent cats from contaminating the pasture, lambing sheds and feed stores

Tissue Cyst Forming Coccidia Flashcards