Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Prevalence of antibodies to Neospora sp. in horses from Alabama and characterisation of an isolate recovered from a naturally infected horse [corrected].
- Journal:
- International journal for parasitology
- Year:
- 1999
- Authors:
- Cheadle, M A et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Pathobiology · United States
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
Researchers in Alabama tested blood samples from 536 healthy horses for antibodies to a parasite called Neospora, which can cause disease. They found that about 11.5% of these horses had antibodies, indicating they had been exposed to the parasite. Additionally, a 13-year-old horse with central nervous system disease was examined after it died, and tests showed it had Neospora antibodies. Scientists were able to grow the parasite from this horse's spinal cord and identified it as a type called N. hughesi, which has been recently recognized in horses. This study suggests that Neospora infections can occur in horses across different areas of the United States.
Abstract
An IFAT was used to determine the prevalence of Neospora-specific IgG antibodies in serum from Alabama horses. Serum samples (n = 536) were from asymptomatic horses routinely submitted for equine infectious anaemia virus infection testing. We also subjected a 13-year-old horse with CNS disease to necropsy examination for isolation and in vitro cultivation of protozoal organisms. In antemortem tests, this horse was positive for antibodies to Neospora sp. in the IFAT and western immunoblot. Results of the prevalence survey indicated that IgG antibodies to Neospora were present in 62 (11.5%) of the 536 serum samples. Endpoint titres for the positive samples were 1:50 (35/6.5%), 1:100 (19/3.5%), 1:200 (7/1.3%) and 1:1600 (1/0.2%). Tachyzoites were first seen in cultured bovine turbinate cells 32 days after inoculation with spinal cord homogenates from the horse with CNS disease. Tachyzoites reacted with known N. caninum-positive serum from horses, cows, dogs and mice, but did not react with murine anti-Toxoplasma gondii or equine anti-Sarcocystis neurona serum. Ultrastructural features of tachyzoites and results of comparison of tachyzoite immunodominant proteins revealed that they were identical to those of N. hughesi, a species described recently from a naturally infected horse. The isolate recovered from the naturally infected horse in the present study (designated NA1) is thought to be an isolate of N. hughesi, although confirmation of this awaits additional molecular characterisation. These results provide some additional evidence that N. hughesi is a valid species and that Neospora infections in horses may occur in widely separated geographic regions of the United States.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10608440/