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Muhlnickel CJ Jefferies R Morgan-Ryan UM Irwin PJ 《Australian veterinary journal》2002,80(10):606-610
Small intraerythrocytic parasites were observed in the blood of three related male American Pit Bull Terriers. Two of the dogs, both less than 1-year-old, were anaemic at the time of initial examination and the third, an adult and sire of the two younger dogs, had a normal haemogram and low parasitaemia. The morphological appearance of the erythrocyte inclusions, analysis of a 450-bp region of the 18S rRNA gene and antibody titres provided evidence that this parasite was Babesia gibsoni, a species not previously reported in Australia. 相似文献
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Miyama T Sakata Y Shimada Y Ogino S Watanabe M Itamoto K Okuda M Verdida RA Xuan X Nagasawa H Inokuma H 《The Journal of veterinary medical science / the Japanese Society of Veterinary Science》2005,67(5):467-471
To determine the distribution of Babesia gibsoni infection in dogs in the eastern part of Japan, an epidemiological survey of dogs suspected of having B. gibsoni infection was attempted using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Thirty-five of 115 such dogs (30.4%) were positive by PCR and/or ELISA. The 35 positive dogs consisted of 28 Tosa dogs, 4 American Pit Bull Terriers, and 3 mongrel dogs in Aomori, Fukushima, Ibaraki, Gunma, Chiba, Tokyo, Kanagawa, and Nagano Prefectures. The positive dogs had a significantly lower rate of tick exposure and a higher rate of bites by other dogs. Twenty-two of 35 B. gibsoni-positive dogs were infected with hemoplasma, and the rate of infection was significantly higher than that of B. gibsoni-negative dogs. 相似文献
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Macintire DK Boudreaux MK West GD Bourne C Wright JC Conrad PA 《Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association》2002,220(3):325-329
OBJECTIVE: To identify subclinical Babesia gibsoni infection in American Pit Bull Terriers from the southeastern United States and to determine the genetic sequence of parasite DNA isolated from these dogs. DESIGN: Case series. ANIMALS: 33 American Pit Bull Terriers and 87 dogs of various other breeds. PROCEDURE: Blood smears were examined for microscopic evidence of the parasite, and DNA was extracted from blood samples and used in a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay designed to amplify the small subunit ribosomal RNA gene sequence of B. gibsoni. Amplification products of the expected size were sequenced, and sequences were compared with published sequences for B. gibsoni isolates. Hematocrit, platelet count, mean platelet volume, WBC count, and eosinophil count were compared between dogs with positive PCR assay results and dogs with negative results. RESULTS: Results of the PCR assay were positive for 18 of the 33 (55%) American Pit Bull Terriers, including all 10 dogs with microscopic evidence of parasitemia. Only 1 of these dogs was clinically ill at the time blood samples were collected. Results of microscopic evaluation of blood smears and of the PCR assay were negative for the 87 other dogs. Hematocrit and platelet count were significantly lower in dogs with positive PCR assay results than in dogs with negative results. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results suggest that American Pit Bull Terriers in the southeastern United States may be subclinically infected with B. gibsoni. However, subclinical infection was not identified in dogs of other breeds from the same geographic area. 相似文献
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Hemolytic anemia caused by Babesia gibsoni infection in dogs. 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
P Conrad J Thomford I Yamane J Whiting L Bosma T Uno H J Holshuh S Shelly 《Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association》1991,199(5):601-605
Babesia gibsoni caused severe hemolytic anemia in 11 dogs from southern California. The most common clinical signs of B gibsoni infection were lethargy, anorexia, anemia, and thrombocytopenia. Acute infection with B gibsoni may be misdiagnosed as autoimmune hemolytic anemia. Diagnosis was most reliably determined by identification of the intraerythrocytic parasites on Giemsa-stained blood smears. The pathogenicity of B gibsoni, difficulties in diagnosis, the parasite's resistance to treatment with available drugs, and frequent interstate movement of dogs indicate that this disease may be a serious threat to dogs throughout the United States. 相似文献
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《中国兽医学报》2017,(4):668-670
选用健康本地杂种犬,分为2组,一组手术切除脾脏,另一组未经任何处理,然后2组犬人工静脉接种含犬吉氏巴贝斯虫的病犬血液,接种后观察临床症状、进行实验室检查(血涂片、血常规、病原的PCR检测),检测2组犬人工感染犬吉氏巴贝斯虫后的发病情况。结果显示,人工感染后2组犬均表现出自然感染犬吉氏巴贝斯虫后的临床症状,实验室检查血涂片中检测到犬吉氏巴贝斯虫虫体,血常规表现出严重的贫血,PCR能扩增出犬吉氏巴贝斯虫的基因片段。2组犬比较显示,切脾组的红细胞感染率和贫血程度均高于未切脾犬。本试验成功建立了犬吉氏巴贝斯虫人工感染方法,且脾切除后感染效果优于直接静脉感染。 相似文献
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Stegeman JR Birkenheuer AJ Kruger JM Breitschwerdt EB 《Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association》2003,222(7):959-63, 952
A 2.5-year-old spayed female German Shepherd Dog was referred for evaluation of progressive anemia, lethargy, and weight loss. Seventeen days earlier, the dog had received a whole blood transfusion to manage hemorrhage after ovariohysterectomy. Mild fever, splenomegaly, and thrombocytopenia were also identified. Von Willebrand disease and Babesia gibsoni infection were diagnosed. Because of the serologic cross-reactivity of B gibsoni and B canis in the immunofluorescent antibody assay for IgG antibodies against these organisms, polymerase chain reaction amplification of parasite DNA was required to identify the infecting Babesia sp. The source of the B gibsoni infection was traced to an apparently healthy American Pit Bull Terrier blood donor. Despite resolution of clinical signs in the dog of this report, a series of antiparasitic treatments failed to eliminate the B gibsoni infection. Screening of potential blood donor dogs for Babesia spp is becoming increasingly important in the United States. 相似文献
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Birkenheuer AJ Levy MG Savary KC Gager RB Breitschwerdt EB 《Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association》1999,35(2):125-128
The recognition of canine babesiosis in North Carolina caused by Babesia gibsoni documents the expansion of the previously reported endemic area of this disease. Clinical signs ranged from severe hemolytic anemia and thrombocytopenia to subclinical infections. No infected dogs had traveled to endemic areas. Antibabesial treatment failed to eradicate the organism from infected dogs. 相似文献
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Y Otsuka M Yamasaki O Yamato Y Maede 《The Journal of veterinary medical science / the Japanese Society of Veterinary Science》2001,63(10):1077-1081
The present study was conducted to clarify the mechanism underlying the oxidative process in erythrocytes infected with Babesia gibsoni. The parasite B. gibsoni was cultured together with erythrocytes from normal dogs for 7 days. When parasitemia reached 12.0-13.4% at Day 7. the production of superoxide in erythrocytes was significantly higher in the parasitized culture than in the control culture (p<0.005). The concentration of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) in erythrocytes in parasitized culture was also significantly increased compared with the control culture (p<0.005), indicating that lipid peroxidation was greater in infected erythrocytes than in non-infected cells. In addition, the rates of superoxide generation in the blood of B. gibsoni-infected dogs were also significantly higher than in non-infected dogs (p<0.001). These results indicate that superoxide anions are increased in erythrocytes parasitized with B. gibsoni. and suggest that oxidative damage, due to lipid peroxidation, might be caused in host erythrocytes by the parasite. 相似文献
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Fukumoto S Xuan X Shigeno S Kimbita E Igarashi I Nagasawa H Fujisaki K Mikami T 《The Journal of veterinary medical science / the Japanese Society of Veterinary Science》2001,63(9):977-981
A pair of oligonucleotide primers were designed according to the nucleotide sequence of the P18 gene of Babesia gibsoni (B. gibsoni), NRCPD strain, and were used to detect parasite DNA from blood samples of B. gibsoni-infected dogs by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). PCR was specific for B. gibsoni since no amplification was detected with DNA from B. Canis or normal dog leucocytes. PCR was sensitive enough to detect parasite DNA from 2.5 microl of blood samples with a parasitemia of 0.000002%. PCR detected parasite DNA from 2 to 222 days post-infection in sequential blood samples derived from a dog experimentally infected with B. gibsoni. The detection of B. gibsoni DNA by PCR was much earlier than the detection of antibodies to B. gibsoni in blood samples by the indirect fluorescent antibody test (IFAT) or that of the parasite itself in Giemsa-stained thin blood smear film examined by microscopy. In addition, 28 field samples collected from dogs in Kansai area, Japan, were tested for B. gibsoni infection. Nine samples were positive in blood smears, 9 samples were positive by IFAT and 11 samples were positive for B. gibsoni DNA by PCR. The nucleotide sequences of PCR products from all 11 samples found positive by PCR were completely identical to that of the P18 gene of the B. gibsoni, NRCPD strain. These results suggest that PCR provides a useful diagnostic tool for the detection of B. gibsoni infection in dogs. 相似文献
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Wulansari R Wijaya A Ano H Horii Y Nasu T Yamane S Makimura S 《Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association》2003,39(6):558-562
This report examines the effectiveness of clindamycin for the treatment of babesiosis in dogs (n=10) experimentally infected with Babesia gibsoni (B. gibsoni). Clindamycin (25 mg/kg body weight, per os, q 12 hours for 14 days) gradually reduced parasitemia levels and induced morphological changes that indicated degeneration of parasites (e.g., segmentation; size reduction; localization in the cell limbic and/or torn state of the nucleus; and swelling, decrease, or disappearance of the cytoplasm) in the majority of dogs. Clindamycin treatment reduced the clinical symptoms characteristic of Babesia infection, including anemia, anorexia, and listlessness. Clindamycin might be useful as a medicine for treatment of B. gibsoni infection. 相似文献
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Matsuu A Kawabe A Koshida Y Ikadai H Okano S Higuchi S 《The Journal of veterinary medical science / the Japanese Society of Veterinary Science》2004,66(8):893-897
To identify the incidence of Babesia gibsoni (B. gibsoni) in Aomori Prefecture, northeastern Japan, dogs with acute B. gibsoni infection were investigated at the Animal Teaching Hospital, Kitasato University, between April 2002 and March 2003. Eighteen dogs with acute B. gibsoni infection were recognized; they were all male dogs of the fighting dog breed Tosa. Their platelet counts were below normal and their packed cell volumes (PCVs) were at various levels. We collected blood samples from 141 Tosa dogs from Aomori Prefecture and used polymerase chain reaction assay to investigate the incidence of subclinical B. gibsoni infection. We also looked into the serological abnormalities associated with thrombocytopenia or anemia in subclinical infection. Forty-one of 87 dogs (47.1%) with histories of dog fighting, and one dog of 54 without a history of dog fighting were positive for B. gibsoni; that is, 42 of 141 dogs (29.8%) showed a positive result. The mean platelet counts of dogs with subclinical infection were significantly lower and levels of anti-platelet IgG were significantly higher than levels for dogs without infection. Anti-erythrocyte membrane IgG levels were significantly higher in dogs with subclinical infections, although mean PCVs were not significantly different. Tosa dogs from Aomori Prefecture, Japan, were highly infected with B. gibsoni subclinically and this pathogen might be successfully transmitted during dog fighting. Dogs with subclinical infections were at risk of chronic thrombocytopenia, which may be due to autoimmune mechanisms. 相似文献
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Irizarry-Rovira AR Stephens J Christian J Kjemtrup A DeNicola DB Widmer WR Conrad PA 《Veterinary clinical pathology / American Society for Veterinary Clinical Pathology》2001,30(4):180-188
Abstract: A 10-year-old spayed female mixed-breed dog was presented to the Purdue University Veterinary Teaching Hospital (PUVTH) with complaints of persistent anemia with occasional exacerbations, anorexia, and lethargy. The dog had been presented to the referring veterinarian 2 months prior with multiple bite wounds received during a fight with 3 Pit Bull Terriers. The dog was discharged after the wounds were cleaned and surgically closed. Upon admission to the PUVTH, blood was collected for a complete blood count and biochemical analysis. Microscopic examination of peripheral blood smears revealed intraerythrocytic protozoal parasites consistent with Babesia gibsoni . Molecular analysis confirmed that the organism was B gibsoni and that its 18S ribosomal RNA sequence was identical to that of other B gibsoni isolates from Oklahoma, North Carolina, and Okinawa, Japan. Hematologic changes included moderately severe, regenerative, macrocytic, normochromic anemia, with poikilocytosis, polychromasia, anisocytosis, and a marked increase in nucleated RBCs. Biochemical changes included increased serum alanine aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, and gamma glutamyl-transferase activities. The dog was treated with imidocarb, but despite initial clinical improvement, the dog died 2 weeks after the first dose. A necropsy was not performed. The infection in this dog is the first reported case of B gibsoni infection in Indiana. Because of the widespread geographical distribution of the organism, veterinarians and veterinary clinical pathologists throughout the United States should carefully examine Romanowsky-stained blood smears from patients with acute hemolytic anemia for small intraerythrocytic babesial parasites. 相似文献
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