Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Coxiella-like infection causing liver damage in psittacine birds
By Shivaprasad, H L et al.·Published in Avian diseases·2008·School of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Coxiella-like infection in psittacines and a toucan.
- Species:
- bird
Plain-English summary
A group of seven pet birds and a toucan were found to have a serious infection caused by Coxiella-like bacteria. The birds showed signs of lethargy and weakness for several days before they died, and their examinations revealed severely enlarged livers and spleens. The infection led to inflammation in various organs, including the lungs and kidneys. Unfortunately, the birds did not survive the infection, highlighting the severity of this disease in avian species.
People also search for: bird lethargy and weakness · toucan liver disease · Coxiella infection in birds · psittacine bird health issues · bird infections symptoms
Abstract
Seven psittacine birds and a toucan (Ramphastos toco) were diagnosed as infected with Coxiella-like bacteria, based on polymerase chain reaction and bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequence obtained from each bird's liver tissue. Most of the birds exhibited lethargy and weakness for several days prior to death. Gross lesions included mild to moderate emaciation and severely enlarged and mottled pale livers and spleens. Microscopically, there was multifocal necrosis of hepatocytes with infiltration of a mixed population of inflammatory cells, including lymphocytes, heterophils, plasma cells, and macrophages randomly scattered throughout in most birds. In several birds within the macrophages there were vacuoles containing basophilic small cocco-bacilli organisms measuring about 0.5-1 microm. The spleens had increased numbers of mononuclear phagocytic system cells, some of which had vacuoles that contained similar organisms, as observed in the liver. There was inflammation in the epicardium and endocardium, interstitium of the lungs, kidney, adrenal and thyroid glands, lamina propria of the intestine, and in occasional birds in the brain, bursa of Fabricius, and bone marrow associated with similar organisms in the macrophages. Transmission electron microscopy of the liver and lungs in most birds and in the thyroid glands of one bird revealed pleomorphic round to elongated bacteria measuring about 0.45 microm in diameter and more than 1.0 microm in length. Most of these organisms contained a peripheral zone of loosely arranged electron dense material that was located immediately beneath a trilaminar membrane. Occasional organisms contained nucleoids. This is the first documentation of disease presumptively associated with Coxiella-like bacteria in birds.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18939630/