| Literature DB >> 33515117 |
Mario Younan1, Daniel O Ouso2, Boku Bodha3, Edward K Keitany3, Hezron O Wesonga4, Rinah Sitawa3, Joshua Kimutai5, Wilson Kuria3, Wario Sori Sake6, Nicholas Svitek7, Tobias Landmann2,8, Diba Dida Wako9, Jandouwe Villinger10.
Abstract
We present findings from an outbreak of a heartwater-like disease in camels that killed at least 2000 adult animals in Kenya in 2016. Clinical signs included excitability, head pressing, aimless wandering, recumbency, and fast breathing followed by death after about 4 days. The observed morbidity in one herd was 40% with an average mortality of 7.5% in animals that received early antibiotic treatments. In untreated adults, the case fatality rate reached 100%. Gross pathology showed pulmonary edema, pleural exudate, hydrothorax, hydropericardium, ascites, enlarged "cooked" liver, nephrosis, and blood in the abomasum and intestine. Using established PCR-based protocols for tick-borne pathogens, a sequence close to Ehrlichia regneryi and Ehrlichia canis amplified in blood from two sick camels. We also amplified an Ehrlichia sp. sequence close to Ehrlichia ruminantium Welgevonden from a pool of Amblyomma spp. ticks collected from a sick camel and in a pool of Rhipicephalus spp. ticks from healthy camels.Entities:
Keywords: Acute camel death syndrome; Camelids; East Africa; Ehrlichiosis; Heartwater; Tick-borne disease
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33515117 DOI: 10.1007/s11250-020-02524-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Anim Health Prod ISSN: 0049-4747 Impact factor: 1.559