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===Pathogenesis===
 
===Pathogenesis===
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Fatal toxoplasmosis can either result from overwhelming
 +
primary infection or bradyzoites in tissue cysts may be
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induced to replicate rapidly and disseminate again as
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tachyzoites. Primary infection resulting in death generally
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occurs in immunodeficient individuals, such as
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transplacentally infected fetuses. Conversely, primary
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infection in immunocompetent individuals usually produces
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clinical signs which are mild or remain undetected.
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Activation of bradyzoites occurs during severe
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immunodeficiency. For example, disseminated fatal
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toxoplasmosis can be induced in healthy, experimentally
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T gondii oocyst shedding by experimentally inoculated cats
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with and without feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV)
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infection. The cats were inoculated with FIV 14 months prior
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to T gondii ('TX')
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infected cats by administration of extremely high doses
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of glucocorticoids (Dubey and Beattie 1998). People
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with chronic toxoplasmosis and the acquired immune
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deficiency syndrome (AIDS) commonly develop activated
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cerebral toxoplasmosis as CD4+ lymphocyte counts
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diminish.
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The mechanism of disease in chronic, sublethal toxoplasmosis
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is unknown. Disease may be related in part to
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low level tachyzoite replication. Intermittent antigenaemia
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and parasitaemia have been detected in experimentally
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inoculated cats (Burney and others 1999).
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T gondii-specific antigens and DNA are detected in aqueous
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humour in more cats with uveitis than without
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uveitis, suggesting that organism replication in ocular tissues
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is occurring (Lappin and others 1992b, 1996). The
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organism is rarely documented in ocular tissues of cats
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without fatal disease, yet not all cats with T gondii in
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aqueous humour are diseased. Most cats with uveitis have
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lymphocytes and plasma cells in the ciliary body (Peiffer
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and Wilcock 1991). The pathogenesis of disease may
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relate to immunological reactions against the organism;
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immune complex formation and deposition in tissues and
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delayed hypersensitivity reactions may be involved.
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Interleukin 6 is a probable mediator of inflammation in
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ocular toxoplasmosis (Lappin and others 1997).
    
==Signalment==
 
==Signalment==
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