Chlamydophila felis
Revision as of 17:08, 15 February 2011 by Bara (talk | contribs) (Text replace - "[[Nasal Cavity Inflammatory - Pathology" to "[[Rhinitis")
Chlamydiosis
- Persistent respiratory infection caused by Chlamydia psittaci (felis)
- Mild conjunctivitis, serous purulent rhinitis and conjunctivitis, in severe cases mild bronchointerstitial pneumonia - feline pneumonitis
Chlamydophila felis
- Host adapted species in cats
- Feline chlamydiosis
- Feline conjunctivitis, rhinitis and rarely interstitial pneumonia
- Epidemiology
- Up to 10% cats infected
- Infection via contact with conjunctival or nasal secretions
- Infection may persist with prolonged shedding and clinical relapses
- Stress of parturition and lactation may cause shedding of organisms leading to transmission to offspring
- Clinical signs:
- Incubation period 5 days
- Conjunctival congestion, clear ocular discharge, blepharospasm
- May have sneezing and nasal discharge
- Resolves within a few weeks, or causes persistent infection
- Diagnosis:
- Intracytoplasmic inclusions in stained conjunctival smears
- Antigen detection in ocular/nasal secretions - ELISA, PCR, Kosters, fluorescent antibody test
- Modified live vaccines reduce clinical signs but do not prevent infection or shedding