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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Detecting Pneumocystis infection in cat lungs

By Danesi, Patrizia et al.·Published in Medical mycology·2019·Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale delle Venezie, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Molecular detection of Pneumocystis in the lungs of cats.

Species:
cat
Feline asthmaBreathing & coughCats

Plain-English summary

A study found Pneumocystis DNA in the lungs of 24 out of 84 cats that had died from unrelated causes. While Pneumocystis is usually harmless, it can cause serious pneumonia in cats with weakened immune systems. The researchers suggest that while most cats can carry this organism without any symptoms, it might play a role in worsening existing lung issues or infections. This means that if your cat has chronic breathing problems or is immunocompromised, it’s worth discussing the potential impact of Pneumocystis with your veterinarian.

People also search for: cat breathing problems · Pneumocystis pneumonia in cats · cat lung infection symptoms

Abstract

The genus Pneumocystis comprises potential pathogens that reside normally in the lungs of a wide range of mammals. Although they generally behave as transient or permanent commensals, they can occasionally cause life-threatening pneumonia (Pneumocystis pneumonia; PCP) in immunosuppressed individuals. Several decades ago, the presence of Pneumocystis morphotypes (trophic forms and cysts) was described in the lungs of normal cats and cats with experimentally induced symptomatic PCP (after immunosuppression by corticosteroids); yet to date spontaneous or drug-induced PCP has not been described in the clinical feline literature, despite immunosuppression of cats by long-standing retrovirus infections or after kidney transplantation. In this study, we describe the presence of Pneumocystis DNA in the lungs of normal cats (that died of various unrelated causes; n = 84) using polymerase chain reactions (PCRs) targeting the mitochondrial small and large subunit ribosomal RNA gene (mtSSU rRNA and mtLSU rRNA). The presence of Pneumocystis DNA was confirmed by sequencing in 24/84 (29%) cats, with evidence of two different sequence types (or lineages). Phylogenetically, lineage1 (L1; 19 cats) and lineage 2 (L2; 5 cats) formed separate clades, clustering with Pneumocystis from domestic pigs (L1) and carnivores (L2), respectively. Results of the present study support the notion that cats can be colonized or subclinically infected by Pneumocystis, without histological evidence of damage to the pulmonary parenchyma referable to pneumocystosis. Pneumocystis seems most likely an innocuous pathogen of cats' lungs, but its possible role in the exacerbation of chronic pulmonary disorders or viral/bacterial coinfections should be considered further in a clinical setting.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30566653/