Cryptosporidium-associated enteritis in captive koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus)

IF 1.3 4区 农林科学 Q2 VETERINARY SCIENCES Australian Veterinary Journal Pub Date : 2024-02-11 DOI:10.1111/avj.13323
I Hough, R O'Handley, N Speight
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Abstract

Cryptosporidium spp. sporadically infect a range of Australian native mammals including koalas, red kangaroos, eastern grey kangaroos, bilbies and brush tailed possums and can range from asymptomatic to fatal infections. Traditionally considered a disease of the young or immuno-compromised, and resulting in profuse diarrhoea in other species, here we report an atypical clinical syndrome associated with Cryptosporidium in a captive population of koalas. All affected animals were in-contact adults, and demonstrated anorexia, dehydration and abdominal pain in the absence of diarrhoea. Following euthanasia on welfare grounds, Cryptosporidium infection was confirmed postmortem in three of four symptomatic animals via faecal floatation and/or intestinal histopathology, with enteritis also diagnosed in the fourth koala. Further screening of the captive colony found the outbreak had been contained. Based on sequencing the cause of the infection was C. fayeri, but the source was undetermined. In conclusion, Cryptosporidium should be considered as a possible cause of generalised illness in koalas.

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圈养考拉(Phascolarctos cinereus)的隐孢子虫相关性肠炎。
隐孢子虫属可零星感染一系列澳大利亚本地哺乳动物,包括考拉、红袋鼠、东灰袋鼠、比目鱼和刷尾负鼠,从无症状感染到致命感染不等。传统上,隐孢子虫被认为是幼鼠或免疫力低下者的疾病,在其他物种中会导致大量腹泻,在此,我们报告了一种与隐孢子虫有关的非典型临床综合征,该综合征发生在人工饲养的考拉群体中。所有受感染的动物都是接触性成体,表现出厌食、脱水和腹痛,但没有腹泻。以福利为由实施安乐死后,通过粪便漂浮和/或肠道组织病理学检查,四只有症状的动物中有三只在死后被证实感染了隐孢子虫,第四只考拉也被诊断出患有肠炎。对圈养动物群的进一步筛查发现,疫情已得到控制。根据测序结果,感染原因是法氏囊虫,但感染源尚未确定。总之,应将隐孢子虫视为考拉全身性疾病的可能病因。
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来源期刊
Australian Veterinary Journal
Australian Veterinary Journal 农林科学-兽医学
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
85
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: Over the past 80 years, the Australian Veterinary Journal (AVJ) has been providing the veterinary profession with leading edge clinical and scientific research, case reports, reviews. news and timely coverage of industry issues. AJV is Australia''s premier veterinary science text and is distributed monthly to over 5,500 Australian Veterinary Association members and subscribers.
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