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Coccidia

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Isospora (Cystisospora), other coccidia Dog Cat I. canis 35-45u I. ohioensis 20-30u I burrowsi ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Coccidia


1
Coccidia of Small Animals
2
Isospora (Cystisospora), other coccidiaDog
Cat
  • I. canis 35-45u
  • I. ohioensis 20-30u
  • I burrowsi 17-22u
  • I. neorivolta 20-30u
  • I. bigemina 10-12u
  • Neospora caninum 10-12u
  • Sarcocystis spp 10-12u
  • Cryptosporidium 4-6u
  • (Hammondia heydorni)
  • I. felis 35-45u
  • I. rivolta 20-30u
  • Hammondia
  • hammondi 10-12u
  • Besnoitia 10-12u
  • Sarcocystis 10-12u
  • Toxoplasma 10-12u
  • Cryptosporidium 4-6u
  • Assume Toxoplasma unless know otherwise

3
Comparison of (clockwise) of Isospora felis, I.
rivolta, Toxoplasma and Sarcocystis of cats size
ranges similar for dog coccidia
4
I. felis and I. rivolta in comparison to
Ancylostoma
5
  • All Isospora of dogs and cats
  • 2 sporocysts with 4 sporozoites
  • Intestinal cycle with monozoic cysts in tissues
    (paratenic hosts have only monozoic cysts
  • One week prepatent period
  • High host specificity

6
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7
Banana-shaped sporozoite from excysted sporulated
oocyst. These invade intestinal epithelial cells
to initiate schizogony or invade other tissues
(eg. Lymph nodes) as monozoic cysts
8
  • Developing schizont (Meront)in intestinal
    epithelium cell
  • SchizogonyMerogony, asexual reproduction
  • 1-4 schizogony cycles ? merozoites

9
  • Gametogony (sexual reproduction)
  • Macrogametocyte fertilized by microgamete ?
    zygote ? Oocyst

10
Unsporulated oocysts are shed in feces
11
Clinical signs Treatment
  • Most exposed early in life ? Immune
  • Massive exposure ? bloody diarrhea, enteritis
  • Especially puppy mills, pet shops
  • Main factors number of oocysts exposure and
    immune state
  • Often follows immunosuppression (eg shipping
    stress, distemper)
  • Sulfa drugs (eg Albon)
  • Furozolidone
  • Amprolium prophylaxis or treatment prior/after
    weaning/shipping
  • Supportive Rx until immunity builds
  • Prepatent period one week
  • Self-limiting maximum oocysts shed for 1 week,
    greatly reduce or cease in 2 week patent period
    unless immunosuppressed

12
Toxoplasma gondii
13
Sporulated oocysts of Toxoplasma gondii
  • Oocysts shed by cats only (and other felidae)
  • Shed 10 million oocysts beginning 5-14 days
    after infection
  • Self-limiting after patent period of 2-3 weeks
  • Cats do not shed on second exposure, thus safe
    (unless immunosuppressed)
  • Sporulate to infective form in 2 days -- change
    cat litter 1x/day gardeners beware oocysts
    survive 1 year in moist, cool Cat is pivotal
    factor as source of herbivore infections

14
  • Sources of Toxoplasma infection in Cats
  • Carnivorism (via bradyzoites, tachyzoites) most
    efficient route high of cats shed large number
    of oocysts
  • Oocysts - 50 of cats shed small number of
    oocysts
  • Congenital Clinical signs seen in offspring,
    especially if 1st trimester exposure
  • Cats develop both 1) the enteroepithelial phase
    of schizogony, gametogony in gut with oocyst
    shedding, and 2) the extraintestinal tissue phase
    of other hosts. Toxoplasma is an obligate
    intracellular, pantropic organism that can infect
    any warm-blooded vertebrate (including birds). In
    the extraintestinal phase, sporozoites,
    bradyzoites or tachyzoites invade lymph nodes,
    disseminate via lymph or blood to liver, lung
    then other tissues.

15
  • Rapid, proliferative schizogony (tachyzoites)
    occurs /- clinical disease in intracellular
    pseudocysts until contained by immunity in 7-10
    days. The organism then persists long-term
    asymptomatically as bradyzoites especially in
    reticuloendothelial system cells of the liver,
    lung, brain, eye, lymph nodes. When only
    partially contained, periodic recrudescence of
    multiplication, necrosis of tissues occurs,
    producing chronic disease with signs depending
    on tissue location of organisms and lesions.
  • Congenital infections occur by invasive,
    proliferative tachyzoites in the potentially
    acute phase of the disease.

16
Toxoplasma is found in highest prevalence in
moist environments in the USA and globally.
17
The cat is the key epidemiological factor in
infection of herbivores. Surveys reveal about 1
of pound cats are shedding Toxoplasma oocysts at
any one time. Sheep may abort or produce weak
lambs if exposed during pregancy, but only once,
then are immune.
Placentitis
18
  • Carnivorism, not oocyst exposure, is the most
    important source of infection of humans Beeflt
    chicken lt horse lt lamb/goat lt pork
  • Cattle are relatively resistant hosts and
    organisms are difficult to isolate from tissues,
    does not persist more than a few months Filet
    mignon is OK?
  • Chicken is usually frozen or well cooked
    Horsemeat not eaten in US
  • Lamb/goats 5 of market lambs infected can
    pass in goat milk
  • Pork 1/3 infected in US surveys 6 of
    hamburger contaminated by added pork, butcher
    equipment Rare burgers have risk

19
  • Prevention in Food Sources
  • Heat to over 70 C
  • Experimental irradiation, specialty market -
    30Krad for pork kills organism and many bacteria
  • Meal preparation Wash hands after handle raw
    meat one cyst ? 100,000 bradyzoites
  • Salting, curing kills
  • Freezing with home freezer temperatures (-40F)
    kills but not reliable

20
Public Health
  • Surveys reveal 1/3 people have titers to
    Toxoplasma, increases with age Usually immune
    to new infection May recrudesce with fatal
    results if immunosuppression (eg AIDS patients)
  • Humans usually develop asymptomatically or have
    flu-like symptoms in the acute phase Death
    possible but most recover completely some
    develop low-grade seething, recurrent chronic
    disease, especially eye, brain, liver, lung,
    lymphatic tissues. Location determines signs.
    Toxoplasma is thus often on differential
    diagnosis lists
  • If infection of non-immune mother occurs in
    pregnancy, 20-50 of fetus will be infected, some
    will abort
  • Most damage to fetus if infected in the first
    trimester ? Anencephaly, blindness, retardation,
    etc. Toxoplasma estimated to occur in 1 of 1000
    births, most are asymptomatic, some delay signs
    for years (eg. until puberty)
  • Number of infective stages ingested, immune state
    are the crucial factors in infection course

21
Diagnosis
  • Oocysts in cats can be found by flotation
    procedures at 5-24 days post infection only
  • Sheathers sugar (5 lb sucrose 1450 water
    29 g phenol) is best
  • Do Double Flotation float 10 minutes,
    coverslip, let float to under coverslip 10
    minutes film is 100u, Toxoplasma only 10-12u
    Focus just under coverslip

22
  • Serology
  • Reliable human, dog, other species
  • Cats notorious for developing low, unreliable
    titers after 4-6 weeks
  • Sabin-Feldman Dye test (oldest test)
  • IFA Common use IgM early
  • ELISA Detect IgM, IgG, Antigen
  • IHA, CF Late IgG, not as sensitive
  • Do paired sera 2-3 weeks apart 4x rise in
    titer is diagnostic gt1256 considered positive
    for active infection, especially cats 11024 is
    the cut-off by many for clinical disease
  • There are many different strains for Toxoplasma
    (and other protozoan diseases)

23
Animal inoculation
  • Animal inoculation can be done using oocysts or
    tissue (pepsin digest wash) with oral,
    intraperitoneal or intracranial infection of
    mice, rats.
  • Find organism in peritoneal fluid in 4-5 days,
    in tissues 4-6 weeks, by serology in 3 weeks

Peritoneal fluid
Impression smear
Brain section
24
Treatment
  • Sulfa drugs Sulfadiazine (60mg.kg.day)
    Pyrimethamine (0.5-1.0 mg/kg/day) yeast or
    folinic acid (for side effects), or long acting
    sulfa drugs (eg Tribrissen, Di-Trem)
  • Clindamycin is drug of choice

25
  • Classic predator-prey life cycle, numerous
    species
  • High host specificity
  • Gametogony sporogony in predator, Schizogony
    tissue phase in prey
  • Acute disease possible in proliferative
    schizogony phase (counterpart of tachyzoites) in
    reticuloendothelial tissues
  • Skeletal and cardiac muscle tissue stage is
    quiescent (counterpart of bradysoites)
  • May shed high numbers for extended periods (eg
    60 days) little gut pathogenicity No immunity
    to re-infection develops in predators
  • Human Isospora now known to be S. bovihominis
    or S. porcihominis

26
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27
Hammondia
  • Indistinquishable from Toxoplasma (10-12u)
  • Non-pathogenic in cats which have intestinal
    gametogony phase only Schizongony in muscle
    tissue of rodent hosts Sporogony in the
    environment

28
Besnoitia
  • Slightly larger than Toxoplasma (12-17u)
  • Asymptomatic gametogony in cat, sporogony in
    environment, schizogony in subcutaneous tissues
    of rodent, herbivores, etc
  • Differential diagnosis importance only

29
Cryptosporidium
  • Occurs in dogs and cats, but low prevalence
  • Probably of minor clinical or public health
    importance
  • Differentiate from yeast, which are not acid
    fast and are variable in size

30
Neospora caninum
  • Newly described in dog (1988)previously
    confused with Toxoplasma
  • Oocysts 10-12u in size are shed by dogs Source
    of infection for abortion in dairies, beef cattle
  • Ultrastucture, immunohistochemistry different
    from Toxoplasma
  • Clinical disease may result in dogs which is
    similar to Toxoplasmosis, but neurological and
    muscular abnormalities predominate with Neospora

31
Pneumocystis carinii
  • Organism of uncertain taxonomy (yeast vs
    sporozoan) that infects respiratory tissues of
    humans, dogs, other species, most subclinical ,
    lt10 dry non-productive cough
  • If immunosuppress, proliferate in alveoli with
    clinical disease
  • Diagnosis by transtracheal wash, biopsy or
    sputum sample ? ID organism By histopathology,
    does not stain with Hemotoxylin and Eosin must
    use special stains including Giemsa, Wrights,
    Gram stain or Silver stain (the latter is best)
  • Treatment may be tried with sulfas (eg
    Tribrissen), pentamidine isothionoate
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