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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Kittens dying young show gut bacteria shift to harmful Enterococcus

By Ghosh, Anuradha et al.·Published in Journal of clinical microbiology·2013·Departments of Clinical Sciences.·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Mortality in kittens is associated with a shift in ileum mucosa-associated enterococci from Enterococcus hirae to biofilm-forming Enterococcus faecalis and adherent Escherichia coli.

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Plain-English summary

A group of foster kittens, many of whom were sick, showed a shift in gut bacteria that could be linked to their poor health. Healthy kittens had a type of bacteria called Enterococcus hirae, which is usually harmless, while sick kittens had more harmful bacteria like Enterococcus faecalis and Escherichia coli. This change in gut bacteria might help explain why some kittens develop severe illness and die before 8 weeks of age. Understanding these differences could lead to better treatments and care for sick kittens.

People also search for: kitten diarrhea treatment · why are my kittens dying · probiotics for sick kittens

Abstract

Approximately 15% of foster kittens die before 8 weeks of age, with most of these kittens demonstrating clinical signs or postmortem evidence of enteritis. While a specific cause of enteritis is not determined in most cases, these kittens are often empirically administered probiotics that contain enterococci. The enterococci are members of the commensal intestinal microbiota but also can function as opportunistic pathogens. Given the complicated role of enterococci in health and disease, it would be valuable to better understand what constitutes a "healthy" enterococcal community in these kittens and how this microbiota is impacted by severe illness. In this study, we characterized the ileum mucosa-associated enterococcal community of 50 apparently healthy and 50 terminally ill foster kittens. In healthy kittens, Enterococcus hirae was the most common species of ileum mucosa-associated enterococci and was often observed to adhere extensively to the small intestinal epithelium. These E. hirae isolates generally lacked virulence traits. In contrast, non-E. hirae enterococci, notably Enterococcus faecalis, were more commonly isolated from the ileum mucosa of kittens with terminal illness. Isolates of E. faecalis had numerous virulence traits and multiple antimicrobial resistances. Moreover, the attachment of Escherichia coli to the intestinal epithelium was significantly associated with terminal illness and was not observed in any kitten with adherent E. hirae. These findings identify a significant difference in the species of enterococci cultured from the ileum mucosa of kittens with terminal illness compared to the species cultured from healthy kittens. In contrast to prior case studies that associated enteroadherent E. hirae with diarrhea in young animals, these controlled studies identified E. hirae as more often isolated from healthy kittens and adherence of E. hirae as more common and extensive in healthy kittens than in sick kittens.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23966487/