Department of Equine and Small Animal Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 57, 00014, Helsinki, Finland.
Department of Veterinary Biosciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Helsinki, P.O. Box 66, 00014, Helsinki, Finland.
Acta Vet Scand. 2022 Feb 2;64(1):2. doi: 10.1186/s13028-022-00622-5.
Neurological signs, such as head tilt, torticollis, paralysis, and seizures, are common in rabbits. Differential diagnoses include two zoonotic infections caused by the microsporidial fungi Encephalitozoon cuniculi and the apicomplexan protozoa Toxoplasma gondii. Both infections are mainly latent in rabbits but may cause severe or even fatal disease. Although several international studies have reported the seroprevalence of these pathogens in different commercial rabbit populations, similar prevalence studies and risk-factor analyses among family-owned pet rabbits are uncommon and lacking in Scandinavia. We sought to estimate the seroprevalence and possible risk factors for E. cuniculi and T. gondii among Finnish pet rabbits. We used ELISA to measure E. cuniculi IgG seroprevalence of 247 rabbits and modified direct agglutination test for T. gondii seroprevalence of 270 rabbits. Samples were collected as part of the Finnish Pet Rabbit Health Research project. Internet-based questionnaires (n = 231) completed by the rabbit owners were used for risk-factor analysis.
The apparent seroprevalence of E. cuniculi was 29.2% and true seroprevalence of T. gondii 3.9%. Risk factors were analysed only for E. cuniculi due to the low T. gondii seroprevalence. The final multivariable logistic regression model revealed that rabbits spending the whole summer outdoors had a higher risk of being E. cuniculi seropositive than rabbits with limited outdoor access. Additionally, rabbits living in households with only one or two rabbits had higher risk of being E. cuniculi seropositive than those in multi-rabbit households.
Nearly one third of Finnish pet rabbits participating in this study had E. cuniculi IgG antibodies, indicating previous exposure to this pathogen. The prevalence is similar to that reported previously in clinically healthy rabbit populations in UK and Korea. While the seroprevalence of T. gondii was low (3.9%), antibodies were detected. Therefore, these zoonotic parasitic infections should be considered as differential diagnoses when treating rabbits.
兔的神经症状,如斜颈、角弓反张、瘫痪和癫痫,较为常见。鉴别诊断包括由微孢子真菌脑炎微孢子虫和顶复门原虫弓形体引起的两种人畜共患感染。这两种感染在兔子中主要是潜伏的,但可能导致严重甚至致命的疾病。尽管一些国际研究报告了不同商业兔群中这些病原体的血清流行率,但在斯堪的纳维亚,类似的宠物兔流行率研究和风险因素分析并不常见,也缺乏。我们试图估计芬兰宠物兔中脑炎微孢子虫和弓形体的血清流行率和可能的危险因素。我们使用 ELISA 法测量了 247 只兔的脑炎微孢子虫 IgG 血清流行率,并用改良的直接凝集试验测量了 270 只兔的弓形体血清流行率。样本是作为芬兰宠物兔健康研究项目的一部分收集的。通过互联网向兔主人发放调查问卷(n=231)进行风险因素分析。
脑炎微孢子虫的显性血清流行率为 29.2%,弓形体的真实血清流行率为 3.9%。由于弓形体的血清流行率较低,仅对脑炎微孢子虫进行了风险因素分析。最终的多变量逻辑回归模型显示,整个夏天都在户外的兔子比户外活动有限的兔子更有可能感染脑炎微孢子虫。此外,家中只有一只或两只兔子的兔子比多只兔子的家庭中的兔子更有可能感染脑炎微孢子虫。
参与本研究的近三分之一的芬兰宠物兔有脑炎微孢子虫 IgG 抗体,表明以前曾接触过这种病原体。这一流行率与英国和韩国临床健康兔群报告的流行率相似。虽然弓形体的血清流行率较低(3.9%),但仍检测到了抗体。因此,在治疗兔子时,应将这些人畜共患寄生虫感染作为鉴别诊断。