Toxoplasmosis - Cat and Dog
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Description
Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate, intracellular protozoa that is capable of infecting most mammals. Cats and other felids are the definitive host for T. gondii, and all other mammals, including dogs, are intermediate hosts.
Signalment
Diagnosis
Clinical Signs
Laboratory Tests
- Serology
- Sabin-Feldman Dye test (old method)
- ELISA
- Mouse inoculation for confirmation
- 30-80% test seropositive
- Each cat sheds oocysts for 1-2 weeks of its life
Diagnostic Imaging
Pathology
Treatment
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
Prognosis
Links
- Cornell College of Veterinary Medicine Toxoplasmosis Factsheet
- Feline Advisory Bureau: Toxoplasmosis in cats and man
References
dogs
- Caused by Toxoplasma gondii
- Cats are definitive hosts but other species may become intermediate hosts if they ingest the oocysts
- Usually induces antibody response but remains silent clinically
- Often show clinical signs when immunosuppressed
- Involves many different tissues
- Multifocal necrotising interstitial pneumonia
- Proliferation of type II pneumocytes
- Macrophage and neutrophil infiltration