1. Different Types of Co-Infection by Contagious Ecthyma Virus, Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli , Mycoplasma conjunctivae , Ecto- and Endo-Parasites in Four Young Alpine Ibex (Capra ibex).
- Author
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Domenis, Lorenzo, Spedicato, Raffaella, Guidetti, Cristina, Carella, Emanuele, and Robetto, Serena
- Subjects
ANIMAL diseases ,DOMESTIC animals ,ANIMAL mortality ,AUTOPSY ,ESCHERICHIA coli - Abstract
Simple Summary: To deepen the knowledge about the perinatal pathology of the Alpine ibex (Capra ibex) and, at the same time, to evaluate its potential role in the interspecific transmission of diseases to other wild and domestic animals, including humans, we present the necropsy findings and subsequent analytic results obtained from four young ibex found dead in Valle d'Aosta, a region of northwestern Italy. The animals, with various co-infection patterns, were affected—showing typical gross and microscopical lesions in target organs and tissues—by contagious ecthyma virus (ORFV) (agent of a highly diffusive pustular dermatitis transmissible to small ruminants and humans), Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) (major etiological agent of infantile diarrhoea, especially in developing countries), Mycoplasma conjunctivae (MC) (cause of an ocular infection common to goats and sheep), various ectoparasites (ECP) (ticks and keds), and endoparasites (ENPs) (lung and intestinal nematodes, and coccidia). The research aimed to investigate the perinatal pathology of Alpine ibex (Capra ibex) through the study of four young subjects (at the age of 3 to 4 months) found dead in Valle d'Aosta, a region of northwestern Italy. The carcasses were submitted to necropsy followed by an examination of ecto- and endoparasites (ECP and ENP); samples from the gross lesions (in summary, cutaneous papilloma and crusts, ocular discharge, lobular haemorrhagic areas in the lungs, catarrhal–haemorrhagic enterocolitis) were analysed by bacteriological, histopathological, and biomolecular methods to define the etiological agent. The subjects, with various co-infection patterns, were affected by contagious ecthyma virus (ORFV) (agent of a highly diffusive pustular dermatitis transmissible to small ruminants and humans), Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) (major etiological agent of infantile diarrhoea especially in developing countries), Mycoplasma conjunctivae (MC) (cause of an ocular infection common to goats and sheep), various ECP (ticks and keds) and ENP (lung and intestinal nematodes, and coccidia). This study emphasises the potential role of the Alpine ibex in the transmission of infectious diseases to other animals such as to humans and, secondly, the need to apply diversified analytical approaches, with the commitment of various specialistic skills, in order to define, in detail, the various and frequently overlapping causes that led a free-ranging animal to the death. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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