Scorpio Diana G, Wachtman Lynn M, Tunin Richard S, Barat Nicole C, Garyu Justin W, Dumler J Stephen
Department of Molecular and Comparative Pathology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci. 2008 Sep;47(5):23-8.
Dogs are susceptible to different tickborne infections, including members of the Anaplasmataceae (Ehrlichia canis, E. ewingii, E. chaffeensis, Anaplasma phagocytophilum, A. platys), Borrelia burgdorferi, and Rickettsia rickettsii. These diseases can manifest with clinical signs including fever, anorexia, malaise, lameness, rash, and bleeding episodes; however, these signs are nonpathognomonic, and infections can occur in the absence of clinical signs. Hematologic abnormalities can include leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, hyperproteinemia and hypergammaglobulinemia. In biomedical research, diseases such as canine monocytic ehrlichiosis, Lyme disease, and Rocky Mountain spotted fever may cause morbidity among exposed dogs and confound research results. Random-source dogs are susceptible to these diseases because of their increased risk of arthropod exposure. Nonpurpose bred, randomly selected conditioned dogs (n = 21) were examined; blood samples were taken for hematology, biochemistry analysis, tickborne pathogen serology, and PCR. Of these, 2 dogs (10% of the population) presented with illness characterized by fever, malaise, lameness, or hemostatic abnormalities, and 15 (71%) had antibodies to one or more tickborne pathogens. No specific hematologic or biochemical differences were apparent between seronegative dogs and seropositive dogs reactive to all 3 pathogens. E. canis and B. burgdorferi PCR of tissues and blood were negative for all dogs. PCR amplification of several Ehrlichia and Anaplasma genes yielded no positive samples. From this cohort of dogs, serologic and molecular results indicate prior exposure without active infection or clinical disease. Exposure to and potential for infection with these bacteria and other pathogens may contribute to blood and tissue alterations that could confound experiments and lead to misinterpretation of data in canine models.
犬类易感染多种蜱传疾病,包括无形体科的成员(犬埃立克体、尤因埃立克体、查菲埃立克体、嗜吞噬细胞无形体、血小板无形体)、伯氏疏螺旋体和立氏立克次体。这些疾病的临床表现包括发热、厌食、不适、跛行、皮疹和出血症状;然而,这些症状并非特异性的,感染也可能在没有临床症状的情况下发生。血液学异常可包括白细胞减少、血小板减少、高蛋白血症和高球蛋白血症。在生物医学研究中,诸如犬单核细胞埃立克体病、莱姆病和落基山斑疹热等疾病可能会使受试犬发病,并混淆研究结果。随机来源的犬类由于接触节肢动物的风险增加,因此易感染这些疾病。对非定向培育、随机挑选的实验犬(n = 21)进行了检查;采集血液样本进行血液学、生化分析、蜱传病原体血清学检测和聚合酶链反应(PCR)。其中,2只犬(占总数的10%)出现以发热、不适、跛行或止血异常为特征的疾病,15只犬(71%)对一种或多种蜱传病原体呈抗体阳性。在对所有3种病原体呈反应性的血清阴性犬和血清阳性犬之间,未发现明显的特异性血液学或生化差异。所有犬的组织和血液的犬埃立克体和伯氏疏螺旋体PCR检测均为阴性。对几种埃立克体和无形体基因的PCR扩增未得到阳性样本。从这群犬中,血清学和分子学结果表明存在既往接触,但无活动性感染或临床疾病。接触这些细菌和其他病原体以及感染的可能性可能会导致血液和组织改变,从而混淆实验结果,并导致对犬类模型数据的错误解读。