Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Bile bacteria in healthy cats and cats with liver disease
By Slead, Tanner S et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2023·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Microbiome analysis of bile from apparently healthy cats and cats with suspected hepatobiliary disease.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A study looked at bile samples from 43 cats suspected of having liver or gallbladder issues and 17 healthy cats to see if there are common bacteria present. The researchers found that neither group had a consistent set of bacteria in their bile, suggesting that healthy cats don't have a specific microbiome in their bile. However, in cats with bile infections caused by E. coli, some additional bacteria were found that might also play a role in their illness. This means that while healthy cats have no core bacteria in their bile, those with infections may have other bacteria contributing to their liver problems.
People also search for: cat liver disease symptoms · E. coli infection in cats · bile problems in cats · cat bile microbiome · cat gallbladder infection treatment
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bacterial infection of bile is a common cause of hepatobiliary disease in cats. Whether bile harbors a core microbiota in health or in cases of suspected hepatobiliary disease in cats is unknown. OBJECTIVES: Establish if gallbladder bile in apparently healthy cats harbors a core microbiota composed of bacterial taxa common to many individuals. Compare results of bile cytology, bile culture, and 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing in apparently healthy cats and cats with suspected hepatobiliary disease. ANIMALS: Forty-three client-owned cats with suspected hepatobiliary disease and 17 control cats. METHODS: Bile was collected by ultrasound guided cholecystocentesis (cats with suspected hepatobiliary disease) or laparotomy after euthanasia (controls). Bile samples underwent cytologic examination, aerobic and anaerobic culture, and DNA was extracted for 16S rRNA gene amplification and sequencing. RESULTS: Microbiome sequencing did not identify a core microbiota in control cats or cats having bile sampled because of clinical suspicion for hepatobiliary disease. Microbiome profiles from control cats were indistinguishable from profiles obtained from sampling instruments and reagents that were not exposed to bile (technical controls). Bacterial taxa that could not be explained by contamination or off-target amplification were identified only in samples from cats with bactibilia and positive bile culture results for Escherichia coli. In several E. coli positive samples, microbiome sequencing also identified a small number of potentially co-infecting bacterial genera not identified by culture. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Cat bile does not harbor a core microbiota. Uncultured bacteria may contribute to pathogenesis of hepatobiliary disease in cats with bile E. coli infection.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37702381/