Parasitemia due to Sarcocystis neurona-like infection in a clinically ill domestic cat.
Nina C ZitzerAntoinette E MarshMary Jo BurkhardM Judith RadinMaxey L WellmanMaria JuganValerie ParkerPublished in: Veterinary clinical pathology (2017)
An 8-year-old, 6-kg, male neutered Domestic Shorthair cat was presented to The Ohio State University Veterinary Medical Center (OSU-VMC) for difficulty breathing. Physical examination and thoracic radiographs indicated pneumonia, a soft-tissue mass in the left caudal lung lobe, and diffuse pleural effusion. The effusion was classified as modified transudate. Rare extracellular elongated (~5-7 μm × 1-2 μm) zoites with a central round to oval-shaped purple to deep purple vesicular nucleus with coarsely stippled chromatin and light blue cytoplasm were seen on a peripheral blood smear. Serum IgG and IgM were positive for Sarcocystis sp. antibodies and negative for Toxoplasma gondii antibodies, suggesting that the infection was acute rather than a recrudescence of prior infection. This organism was most consistent with either Sarcocystis neurona or Sarcocystis dasypi based on DNA sequence analysis of PCR products using COC ssRNA, ITS-1, snSAG2, and JNB25/JD396 primer sets. This is the first report to visualize by light microscopy circulating Sarcocystis sp. merozoites in the peripheral blood of a domestic cat. Therefore, Sarcocystis should be considered as a differential diagnosis in cats with suspected systemic protozoal infection.
Keyphrases
- peripheral blood
- toxoplasma gondii
- gene expression
- single molecule
- spinal cord
- mental health
- physical activity
- pulmonary embolism
- oxidative stress
- high throughput
- spinal cord injury
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- low grade
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- optical coherence tomography
- circulating tumor cells
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- pulmonary tuberculosis