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R C Giles,
J M Donahue,
C B Hong,
P A Tuttle,
M B Petrites-Murphy,
K B Poonacha,
A W Roberts,
R R Tramontin,
B Smith,
T W Swerczek
Department of Veterinary Science, College of Agriculture, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40511.
Pathology case records of 3,514 aborted fetuses, stillborn foals, or foals that died < 24 hours after birth and of 13 placentas from mares whose foals were weak or unthrifty at birth were reviewed to determine the cause of abortion, death, or illness. Fetoplacental infection caused by bacteria (n = 628), equine herpesvirus (143), fungi (61), or placentitis (351), in which an etiologic agent could not be defined, was the most common diagnosis. Complications of birth, including neonatal asphyxia, dystocia, or trauma, were the second most common cause of mortality and were diagnosed in 19% of the cases (679). Other common diagnoses were placental edema or premature separation of placenta (249), development of twins (221), contracted foal syndrome (188), other congenital anomalies (160), and umbilical cord abnormalities (121). Less common conditions were placental villous atrophy or body pregnancy (81), fetal diarrhea syndrome (34), and neoplasms or miscellaneous conditions (26). A diagnosis was not established in 16% of the cases seen (585). The study revealed that leptospirosis (78) was an important cause of bacterial abortion in mares, and that infection by a nocardioform actinomycete (45) was an important cause of chronic placentitis.
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Vet Rec. 2010 Jul 17;167 (3):102-3
20643889
University Veterinary Hospital, School of Agriculture, Food Science and Veterinary Medicine, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland. e.acke@massey.ac.nz
Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital, Lexington, KY 40580, USA. mleblanc@roodandriddle.com
CONTENTS: Ascending placentitis is a common cause of premature birth, abortion and delivery of compromised, ill foals. Recent experimental models have investigated diagnostic procedures and treatment strategies in an attempt to improve live foal rate. Diagnostics such as transrectal and transabdominal ultrasonography are used to evaluate foetal well-being and placental separation, while measurement of plasma progestins or oestrogen identifies a stressed or hypoxic foetus. Treatment is directed at stopping spread of infection, maintaining uterine quiescence and blocking production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. It must be instituted early if a pregnancy is to be saved. Treatments include antibiotics, tocolytics and immunomodulators. Prompt, aggressive treatment with antibiotics has improved foal viability in experimental models of placentitis.
C S Bailey,
M L Macpherson,
M A Pozor,
M H T Troedsson,
S Benson,
S Giguere,
L C Sanchez,
M M Leblanc,
T W Vickroy
University of Florida, Dept of LACS, College of Veterinary Medicine, PO Box 100136, Gainesville, FL 32610, USA.
The objective was to determine if long-term treatment with trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole (antimicrobial), pentoxifylline (anti-inflammatory/anti-cytokine) and altrenogest (synthetic progestin), would improve pregnancy outcome in mares with experimentally induced placentitis. Seventeen normal, pregnant pony mares were enrolled in the study at 280-295 d of pregnancy. Placentitis was induced in all mares by intra-cervical inoculation of Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus (10(7) CFU). Five mares served as infected, untreated control animals (Group UNTREAT). Twelve mares (Group TREAT) were infected and given trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole (30 mg/kg, PO, q 12h), pentoxifylline (8.5 mg/kg, PO, q 12h) and altrenogest (0.088 mg/kg, PO, q 24h) from the onset of clinical signs to delivery of a live foal or abortion. Blood samples were cultured from all foals at delivery and fetal stomach and thoracic contents were obtained for culture from dead fetuses. More mares in Group TREAT delivered viable foals (10/12; 83%; P < 0.05) than mares in Group UNTREAT (0/5; 0%). Ten of 12 foals (83%) in Group TREAT had negative blood cultures at birth. All foals in Group UNTREAT (5/5; 100%) had positive cultures from one or more samples (blood, stomach contents, and thoracic fluid). Bacteria were recovered from uterine culture samples in both groups. Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus was the predominant organism recovered from fetal/foal or mare culture samples. The authors inferred that administration of trimethoprim sulfamethoxazole, pentoxifylline and altrenogest may improve the viability of foals from mares with experimentally induced placentitis.
Rotterdam Zoo, Van Aerssenlaan, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
The captive greater one-horned rhinoceros population consists of 176 animals. Since 1971, a total of 226 calves were born into this captive population. However, 24% of the offspring born were either stillborn or did not survive the first 3 months. The causes for this high rate of stillbirth and neonate mortality have not yet been documented. Here, we report on the veterinary management of a dystocia and foetotomy resulting from a malpositioned greater one-horned rhinoceros foetus. The dead foetus presented with a forelimb flexed at the shoulder joint, with all other joints extended. The foetus was dissected into five parts and extracted during two anaesthesias on two consecutive days. The dam recovered fully and came into oestrous 31 days after surgery. Post-mortem and CT examination of the malformed foetal head revealed cranioschisis with cerebral aplasia and cerebellar hypoplasia. The cerebral aplasia presented here and in other recent cases suggests that neural tube defects and cranial malformations may be associated with more captive rhinoceros stillbirths than previously considered. Epidemiologic studies of these phenomena and possible nutritional deficiencies or hereditary defects are warranted.
Veterinary Sciences, Veterinary Sciences Centre, School of Agriculture, Food Science and Veterinary Medicine, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland. yvonne.abbott@ucd.ie
This is, to the best of our knowledge, the first case report to describe the apparent transmission of Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus from an infected dog to a handler who subsequently developed severe systemic infection. Characterization of the haemolytic streptococci isolated from both the patient and the dog, by phenotypic and molecular analysis, confirmed the canine and human isolates were identical.
Peter L Ryan,
David L Christiansen,
Richard M Hopper,
Carol A Bagnell,
Wendy E Vaala,
Michelle M Leblanc
Department of Pathobiology and Population Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Mississippi 39762, USA. ryan@cvm.msstate.edu
Placental insufficiency is regarded as the primary factor contributing to late-term abortion and perinatal death of foals. Often when problems associated with late-term pregnancy in the horse are manifest the condition is well-advanced and therapeutic intervention may not be effective in rescuing the pregnancy. If a compromised pregnancy due to placental insufficiency could be identified early, the pregnancy might be sustained through medical intervention. Because the placenta is the sole source of circulating relaxin in the mare, we hypothesized that systemic relaxin may serve as a biomarker of placental function and fetal well-being and a predictor of pregnancy outcome at delivery. To test this hypothesis we monitored plasma relaxin in mares (light breeds) with normal and problematic pregnancies from clinical cases presented to the veterinary hospital and in pregnant mares experimentally inoculated with Streptococcus equi zooepidemicus to induce uterine infection. Upon establishment of placentitis, mares were assigned to different therapeutic strategies and responsiveness was monitored. Blood was collected during the third trimester of pregnancy, and relaxin content was determined using a homologous equine relaxin radioimmunoassay. The results reported here show a positive relationship between low circulating relaxin and poor pregnancy outcome in mares with compromised placental function. While relaxin may have value as a diagnostic assay for identifying mares with high-risk pregnancies associated with placental dysfunction, the variable results obtained from mares undergoing drug treatment for experimentally induced placentitis make it difficult to determine the reliability of relaxin for evaluating therapeutic efficacy.
Can Vet J. 2008 Nov ;49 (11):1093-8
19183731
Department of Clinical Sciences (Raggio, Lefebvre, Poitras, Vaillancourt) and Centre de recherche en reproduction animale (Goff), Faculté de médecine vétérinaire, Université de Montréal, 3200, rue Sicotte, Saint-Hyacinthe, Québec J2S 7C6.
Multiple pregnancies are still an important cause of noninfectious abortion, stillbirth, neonatal mortality, and significant delays in reproductive performance in mares. Despite new management techniques, reduction in multiple pregnancies is an ongoing preoccupation and challenge for the equine veterinarian. The aim of the present study was to establish a twin pregnancy experimental model in the mare to study the effectiveness of a transvaginal ultrasound-guided embryonic vesicle injection. Mares in heat were inseminated and then received an embryo at day 7 of the estrous cycle. At days 14 and 30, 53.5%(n = 23) and 23%(n = 10) of the mares, respectively, were carrying twins. Twin pregnancies were reduced at day 30 by transvaginal ultrasound-guided puncture of the embryonic vesicle (control, n = 5) or by transvaginal ultrasound-guided injection (TVUEVI) of 25 mg of amikacin into the embryonic vesicle (n = 5). The TVUEVI treatment had a 40% success rate and no significant variations in progesterone and prostaglandin metabolite were observed. Even though the technique does not seem very effective, the experimental model could be useful for clinical research in embryo reduction and early embryonic loss.
J Reprod Dev. 2009 Feb ;55 (1):55-62
18997446
Keesla Moulton,
Peter Ryan,
David Christiansen,
Richard Hopper,
Chad Klauser,
William Bennett,
Sheryl Rodts-Palenik,
Scott Willard
Department of Animal and Dairy Sciences, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS 39762, USA.
The objectives of these investigations were to develop an ovine model for Escherichia coli (E. coli)-induced preterm delivery, and monitor ewe hormonal response. EXP 1: Ewes (105 +/- 13 days of gestation) were allotted to the following intra-uterine inoculations: Saline-(CON; n=5); 1 x 10(6) CFU/ml (Low Treatment, LT; n=6); or 1 x 10(7) CFU/ml (High Treatment, HT; n=6) E. coli. Twenty-four h after inoculation, the HT ewes had increased (P<0.05) cortisol compared to LT and CON ewes, and HT and LT ewes had increased (P<0.05) progesterone compared to CON ewes. Preterm delivery was 33% for LT ewes and 0% for HT and CON ewes. EXP 2: Ewes (124 +/- 18 days of gestation) were allotted to the following intra-uterine inoculations using lux-modified E. coli: Trial-1: Luria Broth (LB; CT1; n=5); 4.0 x 10(6) CFU (n=5), 20.0 x 10(6) CFU (n=5); and Trial-2: LB (CT2; n=5), 1.2 x 10(6) CFU (n=5), and 5.6 x 10(6) CFU (n=5) E. coli-lux. Preterm delivery occurred between 48 and 120 h post-inoculation in 60, 25, 60 and 75% of ewes infected with 1.2, 4.0, 5.6, and 20 x 10(6) CFU, respectively. Serum cortisol and progesterone did not differ (P>0.05) between CT1 or CT2 and inoculated ewes. In summary, 25 to 75% of ewes inoculated preterm delivered. However, variable results in cortisol and progesterone profiles between Control and inoculated ewes were observed between the two studies.
University of Tennessee, College of Veterinary Medicine, Department of Pathobiology, 2407 River Drive, Knoxville, TN 37996-4542, USA.
A pregnant 18-year-old Quarterhorse mare presented with fever, anorexia, tachycardia, tachypnea, and gastrointestinal hypermotility at day 68 of gestation. Potomac horse fever was diagnosed based on polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of whole blood and a high antibody titer to Neorickettsia risticii. The mare made a rapid clinical recovery following antibiotic therapy, but aborted 98 days later. Necropsy on the aborted fetus revealed lymphohistiocytic colitis, lymphadenitis, myocarditis, and hepatitis. The placenta was grossly and histologically normal. Formalin-fixed lymph node, thymus, liver, and colon taken from the aborted fetus were positive by PCR for N. risticii DNA. Potomac horse fever is a common disease in horses that may result in delayed abortion. The microscopic lesions in the fetus are characteristic, and the diagnosis can be confirmed by PCR on formalin-fixed tissues.
Levente Szeredi,
Miklós Tenk,
Szilárd Jánosi,
Vilmos Pálfi,
Helmut Hotzel,
Konrad Sachse,
Andreas Pospischil,
Miklós Bozsó,
Róbert Glávits,
Tamás Molnár
Central Agricultural Office Veterinary Diagnostic Directorate, H-1149 Budapest, Tábornok u. 2, Hungary. szeredil@oai.hu
Cases of equine abortion and perinatal foal losses were investigated in Hungary during a three-year period (1998-2000). Samples from aborted equine fetuses and newborn foals (total n = 96) were examined using bacteriological, virological, pathological, immunohistochemical (IHC), molecular biological and serological methods. The cause of abortion and perinatal foal loss was identified in 67/96 cases (70%); viral infection was found in 22 (23%), viral and bacterial coinfection in 1 (1%), bacterial infection in 23 (24%), protozoan infection in 1 (1%) and fungal infection in 2 cases (2%). Morphological lesions suggestive of infection were recorded in 2 (2%) and non-infectious causes in 16 cases (17%).
Other papers by authors:
C B Hong,
J M Donahue,
R C Giles Jr,
M B Petrites-Murphy,
K B Poonacha,
A W Roberts,
B J Smith,
R R Tramontin,
P A Tuttle,
T W Swerczek
Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40511.
Placentas from aborted, stillborn, and premature foals were examined during the 1988 and 1989 foaling seasons, and 236 of 954 (24.7%) had placentitis. Microorganisms associated with placentitis were isolated or demonstrated from 162 of 236 (68.6%) placentitis cases. Leptospira spp. and a nocardioform actinomycete were 2 important, newly emerging bacteria associated with equine placentitis. Major pathogens identified in decreasing order were Streptococcus zooepidemicus, Leptospira spp., Escherichia coli, a nocardioform actinomycete, fungi, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Streptococcus equisimilis, Enterobacter agglomerans, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and alpha-hemolytic Streptococcus. Pathogens were not recovered in 64 cases (27.1%) and overgrowth by saprophytic bacteria was recorded in 10 cases (4.2%). Twenty-seven cases (16.6%) had mixed bacterial growth and 93 cases (57.4%) had bacteria cultured from both placenta and fetal organs. The majority of the placentitis cases caused by bacteria, with the exception of Leptospira spp. and the nocardioform actinomycete, occurred in 2 forms. One was acute, focal or diffuse; had an infiltration of neutrophils in the intervillous spaces or necrosis of chorionic villi; was associated with bacteremia; and frequently occurred in the placenta from fetuses expelled before or at midgestation. The other was observed from foals expelled at late gestation, was mostly chronic and focal or focally extensive, and occurred mostly at the cervical star area. Chronic placentitis was characterized by the presence of 1 or a combination of the following lesions: necrosis of chorionic villi, presence of eosinophilic amorphous material on the chorion, and infiltration of mononuclear inflammatory cells in the intervillous spaces, villous stroma, chorionic stroma, vascular layer, and allantois.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
C B Hong,
J M Donahue,
R C Giles Jr,
M B Petrites-Murphy,
K B Poonacha,
A W Roberts,
B J Smith,
R R Tramontin,
P A Tuttle,
T W Swerczek
Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40511.
Pathologic and microbiologic examinations were performed on 1,211 aborted equine fetuses, stillborn foals, and placentas from premature foals in central Kentucky during the 1988 and 1989 foaling seasons to determine the causes of reproductive loss in the mare. Placentitis (19.4%) and dystocia-perinatal asphyxia (19.5%) were the 2 most important causes of equine reproductive loss. The other causes (in decreasing order) were contracted foal syndrome and other congenital anomalies (8.5%), twinning (6.1%), improper separation of placenta (4.7%), torsion of umbilical cord (4.5%), placental edema (4.3%), equine herpesvirus abortion (3.3%), bacteremia (3.2%), fetal diarrhea (2.7%), other placental disorders (total of 6.0%), and miscellaneous causes (1.6%). A definitive diagnosis was not established in 16.9% of the cases submitted. Streptococcus zooepidemicus, Escherichia coli, Leptospira spp., and a nocardioform actinomycete were organisms most frequently associated with bacterial placentitis, and Aspergillus spp. was the fungus most often noted in mycotic placentitis. No viral placentitis was noticed in this series. Dystocia-perinatal asphyxia was mostly associated with large foals, maiden mares, unattended deliveries, and malpresentations. The results of this study indicate that in central Kentucky, the noninfectious causes of equine reproductive loss outnumber the infectious causes by an approximate ratio of 2:1, placental disorders are slightly more prevalent than nonplacental disorders, Leptospira spp. and a nocardioform actinomycete are 2 new important abortifacient bacteria in the mare, the occurrence of contracted foal syndrome is unusually frequent, the incidence of twin abortion has sharply declined, and torsion of the umbilical cord is an important cause of abortion in the mare.
K B Poonacha,
J M Donahue,
R C Giles,
C B Hong,
M B Petrites-Murphy,
B J Smith,
T W Swerczek,
R R Tramontin,
P A Tuttle
Department of Veterinary Science, College of Agriculture, University of Kentucky, Lexington.
Leptospirosis was diagnosed in 51 equine fetuses and 16 stillborn foals with gestational ages from 3 1/2 to 11 months. Diagnosis was based on one or more of the following: positive fetal antibody titer, positive fluorescent antibody test, demonstration of spirochetes in kidney and/or placental sections stained by the Warthin-Starry technique, high leptospiral titers in aborting mares, or isolation of Leptospira spp. from fetal organs. Gross lesions were observed in 80.3% of the fetuses, stillborn foals, and placentas. Gross placental lesions included nodular cystic allantoic masses, edema, areas of necrosis of the chorion, and necrotic mucoid exudate coating the chorion. The liver (23 cases) was enlarged, mottled, and pale to yellow. The kidneys (seven cases) were swollen and edematous with pale white radiating streaks in cortex and medulla. Microscopic lesions were observed in 96% of fetuses, stillborn foals, and placentas. Placental lesions consisted of thrombosis, vasculitis, mixed inflammatory cell infiltration of the stroma and villi, cystic adenomatous hyperplasia of allantoic epithelium, and villous necrosis and calcification. Fetal lesions included hepatocellular dissociation, mixed leukocytic infiltration of the portal triads, giant cell hepatopathy, suppurative and nonsuppurative nephritis, pulmonary hemorrhages, pneumonia, and myocarditis. Spirochetes were demonstrated with the Warthin-Starry stain in the allantochorion and/or kidney of 69 of the 71 cases. Using the direct fluorescent antibody technique, 56/60 cases tested positively for leptospires. Leptospires were isolated from fetal tissues in 20/42 cases. Sixteen of the isolates were identified by restriction enzyme analysis as Leptospira interrogans serogroup Pomona serovar kennewicki; case Nos. 36 and 41 were serovar grippotyphosa.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
C B Hong,
J M Donahue,
R C Giles Jr,
M B Petrites-Murphy,
K B Poonacha,
R R Tramontin,
P A Tuttle,
T W Swerczek
Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington.
Adenomatous hyperplasia with or without cystic formation of allantoic epithelium was observed in 63/954 equine placentas examined from 1 February 1988 to 31 January 1990. In 61/63 placentas, the adenomatous hyperplasia was associated with other placental lesions: 49 with chronic or chronic-active placentitis, six with placental edema, three with fetal diarrhea, one with placentitis and fetal diarrhea, one with fetal diarrhea and placental edema, and one with hyperplasia of chorionic epithelium. When lesions were less severe, the hyperplastic lesions were not grossly visible, but when lesions were severe, nodular, tumorous, cystic masses were observed at or near the insertion site of umbilical blood vessels. Histologically, lesions classified as stage 1 were characterized by hypertrophy and hyperplasia of epithelial cells and formation of intraepithelial glands (lumina). Lesions classified as stage 2 were characterized by the presence of fibro-adenomatous changes in the allantoic stroma. Lesions classified as stage 3 were characterized by the formation of the nodular masses, which were composed of glandular or cystic structures of various sizes lined by cuboidal or low to medium columnar epithelium. These glands or cysts were empty or contained amphophilic secretion, a mixture of neutrophils and secretion material, or neutrophils. The cause of adenomatous hyperplasia of the equine allantois is not certain; however, there is a close connection between chronic placental disorders and this hyperplastic lesion.
G B Rezabek,
J M Donahue,
R C Giles,
M B Petrites-Murphy,
K B Poonacha,
J R Rooney,
B J Smith,
T W Swerczek,
R R Tramontin
Department of Veterinary Science, College of Agriculture, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40511.
Histoplasmosis was diagnosed in nine horses during 1986-1990. The infection with Histoplasma capsulatum caused granulomatous placentitis and abortion in one mare in the 7th month of gestation and three mares in the 10th month. Four newborn foals died from severe granulomatous pneumonia within a few days of birth; and a weanling thoroughbred developed granulomatous pneumonia and lymphadenitis at 5 months of age.
D E Granstrom,
R C Giles Jr,
P A Tuttle,
N M Williams,
K B Poonacha,
M B Petrites-Murphy,
R R Tramontin,
T W Swerczek,
C B Hong,
G B Rezabek
Department of Veterinary Science, Gluck Equine Research Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40546-0099.
Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington.
Granulomatous meningitis was present in 6/33 bovine fetuses from which Brucella abortus (B. abortus) had been isolated. Meningitis was severe in three fetuses, moderate in one fetus, and mild in the remaining two fetuses. The meningitis was characterized by the infiltration of a mixed population of lymphocytes, plasma cells, and macrophages in the leptomeninges. Vasculitis characterized by the infiltration of lymphocytes and plasma cells in the vascular wall was observed in the vessels of the cerebral cortices of 4/6 fetuses. Gram negative coccobacilli were present in the cytoplasm of the leptomeningeal macrophages and extracellularly. Brucellar antigens labeled by the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method were present in massive amounts in leptomeningeal macrophages and in small foci of stained cells in the choroid plexus and ependyma. The findings indicate that B. abortus is one of pathogens capable of inducing meningitis in bovine fetuses.
University of Kentucky, Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center, Lexington 40511, USA.
Department of Veterinary Science, College of Agriculture, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40511.
A study to determine the prevalence of leptospira-induced abortions in the central Kentucky equine population during the 1990 foaling season and to determine the leptospira serovars responsible was conducted. From July 1, 1989 through June 30, 1990, 32 (4.4%) of 726 submissions (fetuses, stillborn foals, and/or placentas) were diagnosed as leptospirosis by the fluorescent antibody test and/or microscopic agglutination test. Attempts were made to isolate leptospires from the fetal tissues and/or the dam's urine in 31 of these cases. Leptospira interrogans serovar kennewicki was isolated from 11 (35.5%) and serovar grippotyphosa from 2 (6.5%) of the 31 cases. Of 12 cases that were culture negative with serologically positive fetal fluids, 8 had titers against serovar pomona, 1 against bratislava, 1 against grippotyphosa, 1 against hardjo, and 1 against both bratislava and pomona.
G P Allen,
D C Bolin,
U Bryant,
C N Carter,
R C Giles,
L R Harrison,
C B Hong,
C B Jackson,
K Poonacha,
R Wharton,
N M Williams
Maxwell H. Gluck Equine Research Center, Department of Veterinary Science, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40546-0099, USA.
REASON FOR PERFORMING STUDY An emerging problem of equine herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1) infection in horses in the USA is a high-mortality myeloencephalopathy that commonly occurs where large numbers of horses are stabled. EHV-1 isolates recovered from recent neurological outbreaks represent a mutant virus strain that possesses enhanced neuropathogenicity. A central question of EHV-1 myeloencephalopathy is the latency carriage rate for these mutants of EHV-1 in USA horse populations. OBJECTIVE To estimate the prevalence of neuropathogenic strains of EHV-1 as latent infections in the Thoroughbred broodmare population of central Kentucky. METHODS Submandibular lymph nodes (SMLN) were collected during post mortem examination of 132 Thoroughbred broodmares. Total DNA purified from SMLN tissue was tested for the presence of latent EHV-1 DNA by an ultrasensitive magnetic bead-based, sequence-capture, nested PCR method. Differentiation of active from latent infections by EHV-1 was achieved by detection of transcripts of EHV-1 glycoprotein B by reverse transcription PCR. RESULTS Latent EHV-1 DNA was detected in the SMLN tissues of 71 (54%) of the 132 mares submitted for necropsy. Thirteen (18%) of the 71 latently infected horses harboured the neuropathogenic biovar of EHV-1. Of the 13 horses latently infected with an ORF30 mutant strain of EHV-1, 11 also carried a latent, wild-type strain of the virus in their SMLN tissues. CONCLUSIONS Neuropathogenic strains of EHV-1 have established a significant presence in the Thoroughbred broodmare population of central Kentucky as latently infected carrier horses. The data also indicate that a highly sensitive DNA detection method is required to identify many instances of EHV-1 latency. POTENTIAL RELEVANCE The presence of a relatively large biological reservoir of latent, neuropathogenic EHV-1 has the potential for posing emerging equine health and economic threats to the future prosperity of the USA horse industry.
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Department of Clinical Sciences, Equine Reproduction Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, USA. pmccue@colostate.edu
REASON FOR PERFORMING STUDY An understanding of the normal events of foaling, causes of dystocia and clinical outcomes is important for equine practitioners. OBJECTIVES The goals of the present study were to: 1) evaluate factors that influence gestation length; 2) report duration of Stage II labour; 3) determine the frequency of dystocia and premature placental separation; and 4) determine the relationship between problems at foaling and foal survival. MATERIALS AND METHODS Foaling records of 1047 mare births were evaluated. RESULTS The average gestation length was 341 +/- 0.3 days, with no effect of mare age or breed observed. Mares carrying male fetuses had a longer gestation (P < or = 0.001) than mares carrying female fetuses. A majority (52.8%) of mares foaled at night between 2000 h and 0200 h when the facility was quiet. Dystocia occurred in 10.1% of all births and the incidence rate was higher in Thoroughbred mares than in Quarter Horse mares. The most common cause of dystocia was abnormalities of fetal posture. A delay in foal delivery beyond 40 min of Stage II of labour was associated with a significant increase in foal mortality. In addition, an increase in foal morbidity and mortality was noted when the interval from birth to standing or birth to nursing was prolonged. CONCLUSION Early detection and rapid appropriate intervention are critical to foal survival in an equine dystocia. Potential relevance: Equine veterinarians should counsel horse owners that early recognition of a foaling problem and rapid, appropriate intervention are critical to the survival of a foal.
Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. mleblanc@roodandriddle.com
REASONS FOR PERFORMING THE STUDY Ascending placentitis results in premature birth and high foal mortality. By understanding how placentitis induces premature delivery, it may be possible to develop diagnostic markers and to delay premature delivery pharmacologically, thereby decreasing perinatal foal mortality. OBJECTIVE To identify relationships between bacterial infection, inflammation and premature parturition in mares with experimentally induced placentitis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Experiment 1: Concentrations of allantoic fluid prostaglandins (PGs) F2alpha and E2 were measured in 8 mares after intracervical inoculation with Streptococcus equi ssp. zooepidemicus (at Days 285-291 of gestation) until parturition and compared with controls (n = 4). Experiment 2: mRNA expression of interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-6, tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and IL-8 in the chorioallantois from inoculated mares in Experiment 1 were compared with 7 mares that foaled normally. RESULTS Bacterial inoculation resulted in 7 aborted fetuses and birth of one premature, viable foal. Infection was associated with inflammation of the chorioallantois in the region of the cervical star, isolation of bacteria and high concentrations of PGE2 and PGF2alpha in allantoic fluid obtained within 48 h of delivery (P = 0.04). Chorioallantois from all mares expressed mRNA for IL-8, TNF-alpha, IL-6 and IL-1beta. Experimentally infected mares expressed more mRNA for IL-6 (P = 0.003) and IL-8 (P = 0.009) in the cervical star region and more mRNA for IL-6 (P = 0.004) in tissues from placental horns than control mares. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE Bacterial placentitis may result in liberation of cytokines from the chorioallantois and prostaglandin formation leading to abortion or birth of a precociously mature foal.
Aime K Johnson,
John F Roberts,
Alexander Hagan,
Robyn R Wilborn,
Ghislaine Dujovne,
Stephen F Sells,
J Michael Donahue
Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University, John Thomas Vaughan Large Animal Teaching Hospital, 1500 Wire Road, Auburn, AL 36849, USA. akj0001@auburn.edu
A 25-year-old pregnant American Quarter Horse mare presented with a 1-week history of progressively worsening vaginal discharge. Transrectal ultrasound revealed increased thickness of the combined uterus and placenta with evidence of chorioallantoic edema but no placental separation. A thickened amnion was visible on transabdominal ultrasound. Abortion occurred 2 days after presentation despite medical treatment. At necropsy, the chorioallantois had variable but diffuse thickening with focally extensive browning of the chorionic surface in the right horn and adjacent body. There were fluid-filled sacculations on the allantoic surface of the umbilical cord, allantoamnion, and chorioallantois associated with diffuse perivascular fluid microscopically. A nonbranching acid-fast bacterium identified as belonging to the genus Mycobacterium Runyon group IV was isolated from the chorioallantois and uterine fluid. Ziehl-Neelsen stain confirmed the presence of intracellular acid-fast bacilli in trophoblasts of the gravid horn and the cervical star area. The current case is unique in that the mycobacteria did not initiate a significant granulomatous inflammatory response in the chorion unless villar necrosis occurred. Sequence analysis of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene and the rpoβ gene, encoding the β subunit of RNA polymerase, indicated that the strain of mycobacteria isolated in this case belonged to a novel species of rapidly growing mycobacteria and not to an established species. Mycobacteria are an uncommon and sporadic cause of placentitis and abortion, but should be suspected in cases of chronic placentitis that are not restricted to the cervical star area.
Department of Clinical Sciences, Equine Reproduction Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, USA. pmccue@colostate.edu
REASON FOR PERFORMING STUDY An understanding of the normal events of foaling, causes of dystocia and clinical outcomes is important for equine practitioners. OBJECTIVES The goals of the present study were to: 1) evaluate factors that influence gestation length; 2) report duration of Stage II labour; 3) determine the frequency of dystocia and premature placental separation; and 4) determine the relationship between problems atfoaling and foal survival. MATERIALS AND METHODS Foaling records of 1047 mare births were evaluated. RESULTS The average gestation length was 341 +/- 0.3 days, with no effect of mare age or breed observed. Mares carrying male fetuses had a longer gestation (P < or = 0.001) than mares carrying female fetuses. A majority (52.8%) of mares foaled at night between 2000 h and 0200 h when the facility was quiet. Dystocia occurred in 10.1% of all births and the incidence rate was higher in Thoroughbred mares than in Quarter Horse mares. The most common cause of dystocia was abnormalities of fetal posture. A delay in foal delivery beyond 40 min of Stage II of labour was associated with a significant increase in foal mortality. In addition, an increase in foal morbidity and mortality was noted when the interval from birth to standing or birth to nursing was prolonged. CONCLUSION Early detection and rapid appropriate intervention are critical to foal survival in an equine dystocia. POTENTIAL RELEVANCE Equine veterinarians should counsel horse owners that early recognition of a foaling problem and rapid, appropriate intervention are critical to the survival of a foal.
Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. mleblanc@roodandriddle.com
REASONS FOR PERFORMING THE STUDY Ascending placentitis results in premature birth and high foal mortality. By understanding how placentitis induces premature delivery, it may be possible to develop diagnostic markers and to delay premature delivery pharmacologically, thereby decreasing perinatal foal mortality. OBJECTIVE To identify relationships between bacterial infection, inflammation and premature parturition in mares with experimentally induced placentitis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Experiment 1: Concentrations of allantoic fluid prostaglandins (PGs) F2alpha and E2 were measured in 8 mares after intracervical inoculation with Streptococcus equi ssp. zooepidemicus (at Days 285-291 of gestation) until parturition and compared with controls (n = 4). Experiment 2: mRNA expression of interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-6, tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-a and IL-8 in the chorioallantois from inoculated mares in Experiment 1 were compared with 7 mares that foaled normally. RESULTS Bacterial inoculation resulted in 7 aborted fetuses and birth of one premature, viable foal. Infection was associated with inflammation of the chorioallantois in the region of the cervical star, isolation of bacteria and high concentrations of PGE2 and PGF2alpha in allantoic fluid obtained within 48 h of delivery (P = 0.04). Chorioallantois from all mares expressed mRNA for IL-8, TNF-alpha, IL-6 and IL-1beta. Experimentally infected mares expressed more mRNA for IL-6 (P = 0.003) and IL-8 (P = 0.009) in the cervical star region and more mRNA for IL-6 (P = 0.004) in tissues from placental horns than control mares. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE Bacterial placentitis may result in liberation of cytokines from the chorioallantois and prostaglandin formation leading to abortion or birth of a precociously mature foal.
Erdal Erol,
Stephen F Sells,
Neil M Williams,
Laura Kennedy,
Stephen J Locke,
David P Labeda,
James M Donahue,
Craig N Carter
Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, College of Agriculture and Public Health, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40512-4125, USA. erdal.erol@uky.edu
Nocardioform placentitis associated with gram positive branching actinomycetes caused a record number of abortions in mares diagnosed by the University of Kentucky Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory (UKVDL) affecting the 2011 foal crop (2011 foal crop: the cohort of foals conceived during the 2010 breeding season). The goal of the present study is to make a comprehensive analysis of this outbreak in terms of frequencies of the bacteria causing nocardioform placentitis mediated abortions and to investigate the ages of fetuses, abortion months and breeding times. In the present study, characteristic slow-growing, pungent/soil odor gram positive branching actinomycetes were recovered in high numbers in placental specimens in 76 abortion cases diagnosed as nocardioform placentitis by pathologists. To determine the type of actinomycetes responsible for the abortions, PCR assays were performed on the gram positive branching bacilli. The most prominent actinomycetes species were Amycolatopsis spp.(37 cases, 48.7%) and Crossiella equi (C. equi)(22 cases, 28.9%). Six cases (7.9%) contained both Amycolatopsis spp., and C. equi. 10 isolates were unidentified by PCR assays and shown to have high DNA sequence homology to Streptomyces species, Microbacterium species, Nocardia species and Allokutzneria species, as evidenced by 16 rRNA gene sequencing and phylogenetic analysis. Nocardioform placentitis related abortions occurred mostly between December 2010 and April 2011 happening exclusively in the last trimester. Breeding time of aborted pregnancies ranged from March 2010 to July 2010, suggesting that if transmission of the actinomycetes agents occurred during breeding, it was not related to a specific season.
Pediatr Dev Pathol. 2012 Mar 8;:
22400796
a.
Abstract Objective:"Cord accident"(compromised umbilical blood flow) as a cause of stillbirth is under-reported, mainly due to lack of diagnostic criteria. We have previously established histologic criteria for diagnosis of cord accident, based on fetal vascular pathology in the placenta. In the current study, we set out to test sensitivity and specificity of these criteria by reviewing an independent set of stillbirth cases. Methods: Placental slides from 26 cases (where "cord accident" was deemed the cause of death) and 62 controls (where the cause of death was anything other than cord accident) were reviewed. The following histologic changes were noted: 1) dilated fetal vessels; 2) thrombosis in fetal vessels; and 3) avascular or near-avascular chorionic villi."Minimal" criteria were defined as the presence of dilated and thrombosed fetal vessels, while the additional presence of focal or regional avascular or near-avascular villi satisfied the complete criteria. Results: Of the 62 stillbirth controls with cause of death other than cord accident, 13 (21%) met the minimal criteria (specificity 79%) and only 4 (6%) met the complete criteria for cord accident (specificity 94%). In contrast, of the 26 cases with a cause of death related to cord accident, 16 met the minimal criteria (sensitivity 62%) and 12 met the complete criteria (sensitivity 46%). Conclusions: These histologic criteria identify cases of "cord accident" as a cause of stillbirth with very high specificity. This study confirms the utility of these criteria for diagnosis of cord accident and further stresses placental examination in evaluation of stillbirths.
The Department of Pathology, Meir Medical Center, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, 59 Tchernichovsky St, Kfar Saba, 44281, Israel. dkidron@clalit.org.il
Fetal liver calcifications are occasionally found in fetal autopsies. However, the incidence, associated findings, clinical significance, and presumed pathogenesis of fetal liver calcifications are not well documented. This study analyzed the characteristics and significance of fetal liver calcifications found on fetal autopsies. Cases of fetal liver calcifications were collected from a fetal autopsy database. Their clinical and pathological characteristics were analyzed in comparison to the remaining cases in the database. Thirty-five cases (4.2%) of fetal liver calcifications were found among 827 consecutive fetal autopsies that had been performed in our hospital during the 16-year period from January 1, 1994 through December 31, 2009. Twenty-nine cases had nodular calcifications, predominantly subcapsular. Calcification in portal spaces and porta hepatis were present in six cases. Twenty cases were missed abortions and intrauterine fetal death. Missed abortion at or earlier than 23 weeks had significantly more subcutaneous edema and other evidence of circulatory abnormalities. Calcifications in older fetuses (>23 weeks) were located more commonly in portal spaces and in other organs. Fetal liver calcification is an incidental finding during autopsies. The significance of fetal liver calcifications has to be assessed in combination with other clinical and pathological parameters, including location and number of the lesions, signs of circulatory compromise, and abnormalities of placenta, umbilical cord, and fetal malformations. Fetal liver calcifications are commonly associated with conditions related to impaired circulation, including umbilical cord abnormalities and subcutaneous edema. We suggest that fetal liver calcifications might attest to circulatory compromise preceding death, especially if subcutaneous edema is present and even when no other abnormal findings are seen.
Department of Clinical Sciences, Equine Reproduction Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA. pmccue@colostate.edu
REASON FOR PERFORMING STUDY An understanding of the normal events of foaling, causes of dystocia and clinical outcomes is important for equine practitioners. OBJECTIVES The goals of the present study were to: 1) evaluate factors that influence gestation length; 2) report duration of Stage II labour; 3) determine the frequency of dystocia and premature placental separation; and 4) determine the relationship between problems at foaling and foal survival. MATERIALS AND METHODS Foaling records of 1047 mare births were evaluated. RESULTS The average gestation length was 341 ± 0.3 days, with no effect of mare age or breed observed. Mares carrying male fetuses had a longer gestation (P ≤ 0.001) than mares carrying female fetuses. A majority (52.8%) of mares foaled at night between 2000 h and 0200 h when the facility was quiet. Dystocia occurred in 10.1% of all births and the incidence rate was higher in Thoroughbred mares than in Quarter Horse mares. The most common cause of dystocia was abnormalities of fetal posture. A delay in foal delivery beyond 40 min of Stage II of labour was associated with a significant increase in foal mortality. In addition, an increase in foal morbidity and mortality was noted when the interval from birth to standing or birth to nursing was prolonged. CONCLUSION Early detection and rapid appropriate intervention are critical to foal survival in an equine dystocia. POTENTIAL RELEVANCE Equine veterinarians should counsel horse owners that early recognition of a foaling problem and rapid, appropriate intervention are critical to the survival of a foal.
Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. mleblanc@roodandriddle.com
REASONS FOR PERFORMING THE STUDY Ascending placentitis results in premature birth and high foal mortality. By understanding how placentitis induces premature delivery, it may be possible to develop diagnostic markers and to delay premature delivery pharmacologically, thereby decreasing perinatal foal mortality. OBJECTIVE To identify relationships between bacterial infection, inflammation and premature parturition in mares with experimentally induced placentitis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Experiment 1: Concentrations of allantoic fluid prostaglandins (PGs) F(2α) and E(2) were measured in 8 mares after intracervical inoculation with Streptococcus equi ssp. zooepidemicus (at Days 285-291 of gestation) until parturition and compared with controls (n = 4). Experiment 2: mRNA expression of interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6, tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-α and IL-8 in the chorioallantois from inoculated mares in Experiment 1 were compared with 7 mares that foaled normally. RESULTS Bacterial inoculation resulted in 7 aborted fetuses and birth of one premature, viable foal. Infection was associated with inflammation of the chorioallantois in the region of the cervical star, isolation of bacteria and high concentrations of PGE(2) and PGF(2α) in allantoic fluid obtained within 48 h of delivery (P = 0.04). Chorioallantois from all mares expressed mRNA for IL-8, TNF-α, IL-6 and IL-1β. Experimentally infected mares expressed more mRNA for IL-6 (P = 0.003) and IL-8 (P = 0.009) in the cervical star region and more mRNA for IL-6 (P = 0.004) in tissues from placental horns than control mares. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE Bacterial placentitis may result in liberation of cytokines from the chorioallantois and prostaglandin formation leading to abortion or birth of a precociously mature foal.
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