Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Deadly hemolytic E. coli infection in 10-day-old Bracco Italiano
By Turchetto, Sara et al.·Published in Veterinary microbiology·2015·Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale delle Venezie, Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Phenotypic features and phylogenetic background of extraintestinal hemolytic Escherichia coli responsible of mortality in puppies.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 10-day-old Bracco Italiano puppy litter showed signs of weakness and diarrhea, and tragically, four of the five puppies died within two days. The mother dog had a high fever and an infection in her uterus. A necropsy on one puppy revealed severe pneumonia and kidney damage caused by a harmful strain of E. coli bacteria. It’s believed that the mother’s milk may have been the source of this infection, which can be particularly dangerous for young puppies. Unfortunately, this situation highlights how infections can spread from mother to puppies, leading to serious health issues.
People also search for: puppy diarrhea and weakness · Bracco Italiano puppy death · E. coli infection in puppies · mother dog high fever and puppies · puppy pneumonia treatment
Abstract
A 10-day-old litter of five puppies of Bracco Italiano dog breed showed weakness and diarrhea and, 2 days later, four of them died. At the same time, the bitch showed high hyperthermia (40 °C) and endometritis. The necropsy of a puppy revealed a severe lobar pneumonia accompanied with a bilateral nephrosis. No gross lesions were detected in other organs. Histopathology of the lung revealed severe multifocal fibrino-suppurative necrotizing bronchiolar-alveolitis associated with rod-shaped bacterial aggregates and diffuse interstitial lymphocytic infiltration. The kidney showed severe multifocal necrosis of the tubular epithelium and diffuse severe congestion of the parenchyma. A pure culture of hemolytic Escherichia coli carrying the Cnf-1 gene was identified, from both the puppy organs and bitch's milk. Moreover, phylo-typing assigned them to the phylogroup B2. Two weeks later, fecal samples from the bitch and the survived puppy were collected for a second microbiological analysis, identifying two hemolytic E. coli strains, Cnf positive and Cdt negative and Cnf and Cdt negative, respectively. Some E. coli pathogenic strains may cause enteric or extraintestinal disease. In dogs and cats, strains of extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC) produce specific virulent factors such as hemolysis and cytotoxin necrotizing factors (Cnf). In this episode, we hypothesize that the bitch's milk could be the main source of ExPEC infection causing high puppies mortality. The role of the bitch as a carrier could not be excluded: stressful conditions, such as pregnancy and delivery, would change the host-pathogen dynamics possibly increasing the release of the infectious burden.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25835470/