Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Detection of Pneumocystis infections by in situ hybridization in lung samples of Austrian pigs with interstitial pneumonia.
- Journal:
- Medical mycology
- Year:
- 2014
- Authors:
- Binanti, Diana et al.
Plain-English summary
This study looked at a type of fungus called Pneumocystis carinii f. sp. suis, which can grow in the lungs of pigs and is sometimes linked to a lung condition known as interstitial pneumonia. Researchers tested 100 lung samples from pigs on farms in Austria and found that 32 of them had signs of Pneumocystis infection. Out of these, only 20 cases were clearly positive for the fungus. The pigs with Pneumocystis infections were also more likely to have another type of lung infection called granulomatous pneumonia compared to those without the fungus. Overall, the findings suggest that Pneumocystis infections are common in Austrian pigs with interstitial pneumonia, but more research is needed to understand how this fungus affects lung health in pigs.
Abstract
Pneumocystis carinii f. sp. suis is a fungus multiplying in the respiratory tract of pigs which occasionally is associated with interstitial pneumonia. Identification of Pneumocystis in tissue samples is considered difficult and there are only scarce data on its occurrence in European pigs. This investigation presents an in situ hybridization (ISH) procedure for identification of Pneumocystis spp. in paraffin wax embedded tissue samples and its application for labeling the agent in lung samples of pigs with interstitial pneumonia. Thirty-two out of 100 lung samples from pigs on Austrian farms were identified as positive, five of them with multiple, 12 with moderate and 15 with few organisms but Grocott’s methenamine silver staining demonstrated that only 20 cases were unequivocally positive for Pneumocystis carinii. In addition to interstitial pneumonia Pneumocystis-positive pigs were more frequently affected with granulomatous pneumonia than Pneumocystis-negative pigs. Frequently concurrent infections with different viral or bacterial lung pathogens were noted but there was no positive correlation between Pneumocystis- and PCV-2-infections. With other infections, no clear-cut differences between Pneumocystis-positive and Pneumocystis-negative animals were found. This study shows that Pneumocystis infections occur frequently in Austrian pigs with interstitial pneumonia. It remains to be shown which are the factors triggering severe multiplication and whether infection with Pneumocystis alone is able to induce lung disease in pigs.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23859080/