Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Healthy free-roaming cats tested for Cytauxzoon felis infection in USA
By Haber, Marion D et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2007·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: The detection of Cytauxzoon felis in apparently healthy free-roaming cats in the USA.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of free-roaming cats in Florida, North Carolina, and Tennessee were tested for a parasite called Cytauxzoon felis, which usually causes severe illness in cats. Out of 961 cats tested, only three were found to be infected, with one cat in Tennessee remaining healthy two months after surgery. The other two cats from Florida were alive 24 hours post-surgery but were not followed up on. This study highlights that some cats can carry the parasite without showing any symptoms, which could mean they might spread it to other cats.
People also search for: cat Cytauxzoon felis infection · healthy cat parasite symptoms · free-roaming cat health risks
Abstract
Cytauxzoon felis typically causes fatal disease in domestic cats. Survival after infection and persistent parasitemia without clinical illness has been documented in a few cases. To our knowledge there are no prevalence studies of C. felis in domestic cats. The purpose of this study was to estimate the prevalence of C. felis infected cats that were presented to trap-neuter-return programs in Florida, North Carolina and Tennessee. Cats that were presented to trap-neuter-return programs were tested using a C. felis-specific PCR assay. A total of 961 domestic cats were tested (494 from Florida; 392 from North Carolina; 75 from Tennessee). Prevalence of C. felis infection in this population was 0.3%. Two cats from Florida and one cat from Tennessee tested positive for the presence of C. felis DNA. These amplicons were sequenced and confirmed to be C. felis. The cat from Tennessee was alive without evidence of illness 2 months post-surgery. The other two cats were alive 24 h post-surgery, but were then lost to follow-up. This is the first report documenting C. felis infections in free-roaming cats. Despite the low prevalence rate, the presence of apparently healthy infected free-roaming cats suggests that they may have the capacity to serve as an additional reservoir host for C. felis. Further investigations should evaluate the potential vector competence of domestic cats as well as the role of chronically infected cats in areas in which cytauxzoonosis appears hyperendemic.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17391852/