Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Mycoplasma ovis-like infection found in Indiana white-tailed deer herd
By Boes, Katie M et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2012·Department of Comparative Pathobiology, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Identification of a Mycoplasma ovis-like organism in a herd of farmed white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in rural Indiana.
- Species:
- wildlife
Plain-English summary
A 72-day-old female white-tailed deer fawn was found to have a mild anemia and signs of respiratory and gastrointestinal issues. Tests revealed that she was infected with a Mycoplasma ovis-like organism, which is typically seen in sheep and goats but had not been reported in deer before. While the fawn showed symptoms, the other deer in her herd appeared healthy, suggesting they might carry the infection without showing signs. The fawn received treatment for her symptoms, but the study indicates that this organism could be a concern for deer populations.
People also search for: white-tailed deer anemia · Mycoplasma ovis infection in deer · deer respiratory problems · treatment for sick fawn
Abstract
Mycoplasma ovis is a hemoplasma parasite of sheep, goats, and reindeer; however, natural hemoplasma infection in white-tailed deer has not previously been reported. Subsequent to finding many coccoid, bacillary, and ring-shaped organisms, consistent with hemotropic mycoplasmas, on RBCs from a 72-day-old female white-tailed fawn, we sought to (1) identify the putative hemoplasma observed in blood from the fawn, (2) evaluate others in the herd for hemoplasma infection, and (3) identify clinicopathologic characteristics of hemoplasma-infected white-tailed deer. EDTA-anticoagulated whole blood was collected from the fawn and 8 apparently healthy does in the same herd. CBCs were performed on 7 nonclotted samples from the fawn and 6 does. DNA was extracted from all samples, followed by PCR amplification of bacterial (16S rDNA) and protozoal (18S rDNA) genes. The nearly complete 16S rDNA product from the fawn's sample was directly sequenced and compared with known sequences in the GenBank database. Samples from the fawn and 7 of 8 does were PCR-positive using hemoplasma-specific and M ovis-specific protocols. The fawn was PCR-negative for Anaplasma spp., Babesia spp., and Theileria spp. The 16S rDNA sequence from the fawn (GenBank accession number, FJ824847) was most closely related to M ovis (AF338268), having 98.5% sequence identity. The fawn had a mild nonregenerative anemia, a neutrophilic left-shift with toxic change, aspiration bronchopneumonia, and gastrointestinal disease. Hematologic values, including blood film evaluation, in infected does were unremarkable. The M ovis-like organism may have acted as either an opportunistic or primary pathogen in the fawn. The high occurrence of subclinical infections in the does suggests that white-tailed deer may act as wildlife reservoirs for M ovis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22112325/