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Molecular identification and antimicrobial resistance pattern of Nocardiaisolated from 14 diseased dogs and cats

Authors :
Condas, Larissa Anuska Zeni
de Farias, Marconi Rodrigues
Siqueira, Amanda Keller
Salerno, Tatiana
Chi, Kung Darh
Werner, Juliana
de Vargas, Agueda Castagna
Bond, Guilherme Borges
Gonoi, Tohru
Matsuzawa, Tetsuhiro
Ribeiro, Márcio Garcia
Source :
Brazilian Journal of Microbiology; June 2023, Vol. 54 Issue: 2 p1287-1294, 8p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Nocardiaare ubiquitous, saprophytic and opportunistic bacteria. They cause a set of pyogenic clinical infections in animals and humans, particularly immunocompromised patients, mostly affecting the skin and respiratory tract, with refractoriness to conventional therapy. The most descriptions of nocardial infections in companion animals involve case reports, and there are scarce case series studies focused on canine and feline nocardiosis in which diagnosis has been based on molecular techniques. We investigated epidemiological aspects, clinical findings, in vitro susceptibility profile, and molecular identification of Nocardiausing PCR-based method targeted 16S rRNA gene in twelve dogs and two cats. Among dogs were observed cutaneous lesions (8/12 = 67%), pneumonia (3/12 = 25%), and encephalitis (2/12 = 17%), whereas cats developed cutaneous lesions and osteomyelitis. Nocardiaand canine morbillivirus coinfection was described in six dogs (6/12 = 50%). A high mortality rate (6/8 = 75%) was seen among dogs. Three dogs (3/4 = 75%) and one cat (1/2 = 50%) with systemic signs (pneumonia, encephalitis, osteomyelitis), and 83% (5/6) of dogs with a history of concomitant morbillivirus infection died. N. nova(5/12 = 42%), N. cyriacigeorgica(3/12 = 25%), N. farcinica(2/12 = 17%), N. veterana(1/12 = 8%), and N. asteroides(1/12 = 8%) species were identified in dogs, whereas N. africanaand N. veteranain cats. Among the isolates from dogs, cefuroxime (12/12 = 100%), amikacin (10/12 = 83%), gentamycin (10/12 = 83%), and imipenem (10/12 = 83%) were the most effective antimicrobials, whereas cefuroxime, cephalexin, amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, imipenem, and gentamycin were efficient against isolates from cats. Multidrug resistance was observed in 36% (5/14) of isolates. We describe a variety of Nocardiaspecies infecting dogs and cats, multidrug-resistant ones, and a high mortality rate, highlighting a poor prognosis of nocardiosis in companion animals, particularly among animals systemically compromised or coinfected by canine morbillivirus. Our study contributes to species identification, in vitro antimicrobial susceptibility profile, clinical-epidemiological aspects, and outcome of natural Nocardia-acquired infections in dogs and cats.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15178382 and 16784405
Volume :
54
Issue :
2
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Brazilian Journal of Microbiology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs62873194
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s42770-023-00968-6