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Journal ArticleDOI

Use of a polymerase chain reaction assay to detect and differentiate two strains of Haemobartonella felis in naturally infected cats.

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TLDR
A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay is more accurate than cytologic examination for detection of H. felis infection and is an effective clinical tool for the detection and differentiation of both H.Felis-OH and H. Felis-CA.
Abstract
Objective To develop a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay that detects and differentiates the Ohio strain of Haemobartonella felis (H. felis-OH) and the California strain of H. felis (H. felis-CA) and to apply the assay to blood samples from cats with and without suspected haemobartonellosis (suspect and control cats, respectively). Sample population 220 blood samples were examined; 82 were from suspect cats, and 138 were from control cats. Procedure A PCR assay was designed to detect and differentiate H. felis-OH and H. felis-CA. Results On the basis of PCR assay results, the overall prevalence of H. felis infection was 19.5% (43/220). Suspect cats (28.0%; 23/82) were significantly more likely than control cats (14.5%; 20/138) to be H. felis infected. Significantly greater numbers of suspect cats were H. felis-OH infected (12.2%, 9/82) or H. felis-OH and H. felis-CA infected (4.9%, 4/82) than control cats (0% [0/138] and 0.7% [1/138], respectively). Significantly more anemic cats were H. felis-OH infected (14.3%; 4/28) or H. felis-OH and H. felis-CA infected (7.1%; 2/28) than nonanemic cats (2.3% [3/128] and 0.8% [1/128], respectively). The PCR assay was more accurate than cytologic examination for detection of H. felis. Conclusions and clinical relevance Haemobartonella felis infections are more common in cats than previously recognized. Haemobartonella felis-OH is apparently more pathogenic than H. felis-CA. The PCR assay is more accurate than cytologic examination for detection of H. felis infection and is an effective clinical tool for the detection and differentiation of both H. felis strains known to infect cats.

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Citations
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Hemotrophic mycoplasmas (hemoplasmas): a review and new insights into pathogenic potential.

TL;DR: The red cell parasites formerly known as Haemobartonella and Eperythrozoon spp have been reclassified as hemotrophic mycoplasmas (hemoplasma) based on strong phylogenetic evidence and 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequences.
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Prevalence, Risk Factor Analysis, and Follow-Up of Infections Caused by Three Feline Hemoplasma Species in Cats in Switzerland

TL;DR: A repeated evaluation of 17 cats documented that the infection was acquired in one case by blood transfusion and that there were important differences among species regarding whether or not antibiotic administration led to the resolution of bacteremia.
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Prevalence of infectious diseases in feral cats in Northern Florida.

TL;DR: Feral cats assessed in this study appear to be of no greater risk to human beings or other cats than pet cats, and had similar or lower prevalence rates of infections than those published for pet cats in the United States.
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Identification, molecular characterization, and experimental transmission of a new hemoplasma isolate from a cat with hemolytic anemia in Switzerland.

TL;DR: A quantitative real-time PCR assay specific for this newly discovered agent was developed, which will be a prerequisite for the diagnosis of infections with the new hemoplasma isolate.
References
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Journal Article

Molecular, clinical, and pathologic comparison of two distinct strains of haemobartonella felis in domestic cats

TL;DR: Genetically and morphologically distinct strains of H felis infect cats in the field and the level of genetic difference suggested that these strains may be different species or genera.
Journal ArticleDOI

Western immunoblot analysis of Haemobartonella muris and comparison of 16S rRNA gene sequences of H. muris, H. felis, and Eperythrozoon suis.

TL;DR: Infectious agents isolated from the spleens of three wild mice by intraperitoneal inoculation of the spleen homogenate into laboratory mice developed clinical signs and splenomegaly, and three isolates were maintained by passage in mice.
Journal Article

Detection of Haemobartonella felis in cats with experimentally induced acute and chronic infections, using a polymerase chain reaction assay.

TL;DR: It was possible to detect H felis in blood samples obtained from cats during peak parasitemia, during most of the carrier phase, and after challenge with immunosuppressive drugs, using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development and Evaluation of a PCR-Based Assay for Detection of Haemobartonella felis in Cats and Differentiation of H. felis from Related Bacteria by Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis

TL;DR: This is the first report of the utility of PCR-facilitated diagnosis and discrimination of H. felisinfection in cats and the potential usefulness of restriction enzymes DdeI andMnlI for distinguishing H. cats from closely related bacteria was examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Advantages of a New Taq DNA Polymerase in Multiplex PCR and Time-Release PCR

TL;DR: The novel application of AmpliTaq Gold DNA Polymerase in a time-release PCR protocol allows specific amplification of target DNA/ cDNA when only limited amounts of material are available or only low-copy-number DNA/cDNA is suspected.
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