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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Horse abortion due to rare infection in South Africa

By Volkmann, D H et al.·Published in Journal of the South African Veterinary Association·2001·Department of Theriogenology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: The first reported case of equine nocardioform placentitis in South Africa.

Species:
horse
Appetite & weightHorses

Plain-English summary

A Friesian mare in South Africa experienced a near full-term abortion due to a rare infection called nocardioform placentitis, which affects the placenta. After the abortion, tests revealed nocardioform bacteria in the mare's uterus. The veterinarian treated her with a 2-week course of antibiotics, and follow-up tests showed no signs of infection. Fortunately, the mare was able to conceive again after just one insemination.

People also search for: horse abortion causes · nocardioform placentitis in horses · Friesian mare pregnancy issues · equine placental infection treatment

Abstract

Since the late 1980s a distinct form of focally-extensive mucoid to mucopurulent uterine body chronic placentitis,caused by nocardioform organisms, hasbeen recognised in horses in the USA state of Kentucky and possibly in other areas. This disease has led to increasing numbers of foal losses from late abortions, still-births, prematurity, or early neonatal deaths. The foals are usually not infected, but may be small or emaciated. Modes of infection and transmission are as yet unknown. Nocardia spp. and related nocardioform bacteria as causes of equine infertility, endometritis and foal death are briefly reviewed. A case of near full-term abortion involving a Friesian mare in the Pretoria district of Gauteng Province in South Africa during February 2000, with the same placental lesion as described in the Kentucky cases, is presented. Nocardioform organisms were visualised on impression smears and histological sections of affected foetal membranes, and were also cultured. The organism has been identified at the Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center of the University of Kentucky as an Amycolatopsis sp. of the less-commonly diagnosed group of nocardioforms causing placentitis in the USA. The organism was cultured from the uterus of the mare 18 days post-foaling, but after a 2-week course of oral trimethoprim and sulphamethoxazole, based on antibiogram sensitivity testing, a uterine flush yielded no growth. A semen sample from the sire of the aborted foal did not yield any Gram-positive filamentous branching bacteria. The mare subsequently conceived to a single insemination.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12219921/