1.First Report of Feline Intestinal Trichomoniasis Caused by Tritrichomonas foetus in Korea.
Sun LIM ; Sang Ik PARK ; Kyu Sung AHN ; Dae Sung OH ; Jae Sook RYU ; Sung Shik SHIN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2010;48(3):247-251
Feline intestinal tritrichomoniasis by Tritrichomonas foetus was first recognized in USA in 1999 and has so far been reported from UK, Norway, Switzerland, and Australia, but not from the Far East Asian countries. In November 2008, 2 female and male littermate Siamese cats, 6-month old, raised in a household in Korea were referred from a local veterinary clinic with a history of chronic persistent diarrhea. A direct smear examination of fecal specimens revealed numerous trichomonad trophozoites which were isolated by the fecal culture in InPouch(TM) TF-Feline medium. A PCR testing of the isolate based on the amplification of a conserved portion of the T. foetus internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions (ITS1 and ITS2) and the 5.8S rRNA gene, and the molecular sequencing of the PCR amplicons confirmed infection with T. foetus. This is the first clinical case of feline intestinal trichomoniasis caused by T. foetus in Korea.
Animals
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Base Sequence
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Cat Diseases/*parasitology
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Cats
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Feces/parasitology
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Female
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Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic/parasitology/*veterinary
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Male
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Molecular Sequence Data
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Protozoan Infections, Animal/*parasitology
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Republic of Korea
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Tritrichomonas foetus/genetics/*isolation & purification
2.Efficacy of Ronidazole for Treatment of Cats Experimentally Infected with a Korean Isolate of Tritrichomonas foetus.
Sun LIM ; Sang Ik PARK ; Kyu Sung AHN ; Dae Sung OH ; Sung Shik SHIN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2012;50(2):161-164
To evaluate the efficacy of ronidazole for treatment of Tritrichomonas foetus infection, 6 Tritrichomonas-free kittens were experimentally infected with a Korean isolate of T. foetus. The experimental infection was confirmed by direct microscopy, culture, and single-tube nested PCR, and all cats demonstrated trophozoites of T. foetus by day 20 post-infection in the feces. From day 30 after the experimentally induced infection, 3 cats were treated with ronidazole (50 mg/kg twice a day for 14 days) and 3 other cats received placebo. Feces from each cat were tested for the presence of T. foetus by direct smear and culture of rectal swab samples using modified Diamond's medium once a week for 4 weeks. To confirm the culture results, the presence of T. foetus rRNA gene was determined by single-tube nested PCR assay. All 3 cats in the treatment group receiving ronidazole showed negative results for T. foetus infection during 2 weeks of treatment and 4 weeks follow-up by all detection methods used in this study. In contrast, rectal swab samples from cats in the control group were positive for T. foetus continuously throughout the study. The present study indicates that ronidazole is also effective to treat cats infected experimentally with a Korean isolate of T. foetus at a dose of 50 mg/kg twice a day for 14 days.
Animals
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Antiprotozoal Agents/*administration & dosage
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Cat Diseases/*drug therapy/parasitology
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Cats
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Disease Models, Animal
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Feces/parasitology
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Male
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Parasitology/methods
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Placebos/administration & dosage
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Polymerase Chain Reaction/methods
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Protozoan Infections/*drug therapy/parasitology
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Ronidazole/*administration & dosage
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Treatment Outcome
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Tritrichomonas foetus/genetics/isolation & purification/*pathogenicity