Bergmann Michèle, Englert Theresa, Stuetzer Bianca, Hawley Jennifer R, Lappin Michael R, Hartmann Katrin
Clinic of Small Animal Medicine, Centre for Clinical Veterinary Medicine, LMU Munich, Veterinaerstrasse 13, 80539, Munich, Germany.
Center for Companion Animal Studies, Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
BMC Vet Res. 2017 Feb 16;13(1):52. doi: 10.1186/s12917-017-0953-3.
Hemoplasma species (spp.) commonly cause infections in cats worldwide. However, data on risk factors for infections are limited. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of hemoplasma spp. infections in cats in Southern Germany and to assess risk factors associated with infection.
DNA was extracted from blood samples of 479 cats presented to different veterinary hospitals for various reasons. DNA of feline hemoplasmas was amplified by use of a previously reported PCR assay. Direct sequencing was used to confirm all purified amplicons and compared to hemoplasma sequences reported in GenBank. Results were evaluated in relation to the age, sex, housing conditions, feline leukemia virus (FeLV) and feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) status of the cats. The overall hemoplasma prevalence rate was 9.4% (45/479; 95% CI: 7.08-12.36). 'Candidatus Mycoplasma (M.) haemominutum' (Mhm) DNA was amplified from 42 samples, M. haemofelis from 2, and M. haemocanis from 1 sample. There was a significantly higher risk of hemoplasma infection in cats from multi-cat households, in outdoor cats, as well as in cats with FIVinfection and in cats with abortive FeLV infection, but not in cats with progressive or regressive FeLV infection.
Mhm infection is common in cats in Southern Germany. Higher prevalence in multi-cat households and associations with FeLV infection likely reflect the potential for direct transmission amongst cats. Outdoor access, male gender, and FIV infection are additional risk factors that might relate to aggressive interactions and exposure to vectors.
血支原体属物种在全球范围内普遍导致猫感染。然而,关于感染风险因素的数据有限。本研究的目的是确定德国南部猫血支原体属感染的患病率,并评估与感染相关的风险因素。
从因各种原因前往不同兽医医院就诊的479只猫的血液样本中提取DNA。使用先前报道的PCR检测方法扩增猫血支原体的DNA。直接测序用于确认所有纯化的扩增子,并与GenBank中报道的血支原体序列进行比较。根据猫的年龄、性别、饲养条件、猫白血病病毒(FeLV)和猫免疫缺陷病毒(FIV)状态对结果进行评估。血支原体的总体患病率为9.4%(45/479;95%置信区间:7.08 - 12.36)。从42个样本中扩增出“暂定支原体(M.)血微小支原体”(Mhm)DNA,从2个样本中扩增出血支原体,从1个样本中扩增出血犬支原体。来自多猫家庭的猫、户外猫、感染FIV的猫以及感染流产型FeLV的猫感染血支原体的风险显著更高,但感染进行性或退行性FeLV的猫则不然。
在德国南部,猫感染Mhm很常见。多猫家庭中较高的患病率以及与FeLV感染的关联可能反映了猫之间直接传播的可能性。户外接触、雄性性别和FIV感染是可能与攻击性行为和接触媒介有关的其他风险因素。