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Leptospirosis |
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This information is provided by Provet for educational
purposes only.
www.provet.co.uk. |
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You should seek the advice of your
veterinarian if your pet is ill as only he or she can
correctly advise on the diagnosis and recommend the
treatment that is most appropriate for your pet. |
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Note for Pet Owners |
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NOTE Leptospirosis can be transmitted from animals to
humans, and it is therefore a Zoonosis. Protective gloves,
face masks and goggles should be worn by veterinary practice
personnel or owners who come into contact with infected
animals. Barrier nursing needs to be practiced to avoid
transmission to other animals and personnel in a hospital
facility, or at home and detergents and iodophore
disinfectants should be used to clean contaminated
environments... |
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Description |
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Leptospirosis is an infectious disease which can affect
several primary hosts including dogs, rodents (rats, mice,
voles), pigs, cattle, horses, the skunk, raccoon and the
opossum. In these species the infection may be subclinical,
however when it is transmitted to other incidental hosts
(species such as humans and cats) the infection is much more
severe, results in clinical signs and these hosts shed the
organisms for much shorter periods than the primary hosts. |
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Leptospirosis is also known as Weil's Disease or Fort Bragg
Fever. |
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Cause |
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Leptospires are thin, flexible, motile, filamentous bacteria
called spirochetes. At least 8 serovars are thought to be
important in causing disease in cats and dogs, though only
two of these - L. interrogans canicola and L interrogans
icterohaemorrhagiae are included in current Leptospira
vaccines. In the USA there is serological evidence that
exposure to the serovars grippotyphosa, pomona and
bratislava are increasing in frequency. |
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Generally, serovars canicola and grippotyphosa cause renal
disease in dogs, whereas the serovars icterohaemorrhagiae
and pomona produce liver disease. |
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Transmission to humans usually occurs by one of the
following routes: |
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Breed Occurrence |
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There is no specific breed susceptibility, though working
dogs and cats on a farm are most likely to be exposed to
contaminated rodent urine. |
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Human infection is most often contracted from: |
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Farm livestock
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Rodents
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Dogs
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Cats ?
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Human workers most at risk include: |
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Abattoir workers
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Agricultural workers
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Miners
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Sewer workers
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Veterinarians
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Signs |
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Cats : Although leptospiral antibodies are found in cats,
disease due to Leptospirosis is very rare. Rodents are the
natural prey of cats and it is reasonable to assume that
they may have inherited some natural resistance to
Leptospirosis which is so common as a subclinical infection
amongst rats and mice. |
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Dogs : Most Leptospiral infections are subclinical or
chronic, but acute and peracute forms are seen.. Puppies are
more severely affected than adults, and large outdoor breeds
of dog are more commonly affected. |
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The sudden presence of large numbers of Leptospires in the
blood (Leptospiraemia) - a peracute infection - can cause
rapid death with few signs. |
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Acute infections cause a very high body temperature (up to
40o C or 104o F ) shivering and painful muscles, followed by
vomiting, dehydration and shock. Blood clotting defects and
injury to blood vessels results in haemorrhage in vomit,
faeces, in the skin and nose bleeds. Hypothermia and
depression precede death. Various compensatory signs
relating to shock may be seen - including increased
respiratory rate, increased heart rate and poor capillary
refilling rate. Inflammation of the uvea of the eye
(anterior uveitis) causes photophobia. |
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Less acute cases develop a variety of signs including
hyperaesthesia, injected mucous membranes with petechial and
ecchymotic haemorrhages. Respiratory signs ( most often
associated with icterohaemorrhagiae infection) include a
cough, dyspnoea , tonsillitis, conjunctivitis and rhinitis.
The kidneys are badly injured which can lead to chronic
renal failure. Jaundice is frequently seen and, if the liver
is severely affected, bile output might cease causing very
pale faeces. Liver failure can result. |
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Sometimes intussusception can occur in association with
inflammation of the intestinal tract and abortion or
infertility can result if transplacental infection takes
place. |
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Humans |
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Signs include: |
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Fever
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Hepatitis
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Meningitis
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Renal Failure
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Uveitis
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Prevention |
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Routine vaccination is important in the prevention of
Leptospirosis, however vaccination with the current
available Leptospira vaccine in the UK does not provide
cross immunity to other serovars such as pomona. |
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Vaccination can reduce the severity of the clinical course
in infected animals but it does not prevent the carrier
state - which presents a risk for humans. |
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New vaccines are being developed which will cover a larger
number of serovars, and which will produce high, protective
antibody titres after only 2 weeks. |
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Diagnosis |
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Live Leptospires can be identified by their writhing
movements on dark-field examination of wet-mount
preparations. Specific fluorescent antibody staining
techniques have also been developed. Urine contains the
highest concentration of organisms , but they can also be
identified in blood and other fluids. |
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Leptospires are difficult to culture - especially from blood
and CSF as they are only present in significant numbers for
the first week of infection. Urine samples collected
directly from the bladder (cystocentesis) are preferred.
Blood samples need to be collected into heparin
anticoagulant - not citrate. |
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Microscopic agglutination (MA) test is the standard
serological test for Leptospires and it must be performed in
a commercial laboratory. One problem with the test is that
dogs may have positive antibody titres following natural
subclinical infection, or following vaccination.
Demonstration of a rising antibody titre is the only way to
confirm that an active infection is present. |
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ELISA tests have been used to measure IgG and IgM antibody
concentrations. The IgM increases within a week of infection
and peaks within 14 days; whereas the IgG develops in 2-3
weeks and peaks after about 30 days. Dogs that die within a
week have high IgM, but ormal MA and IgG titres. |
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Most clinical cases of leptospirosis have azotaemia with
increased blood urea (82-100%) and creatinine (82-100%)
concentrations. The majority have hyperphosphataemia
(47-83%) and a large number have increased alkaline
phosphatase (33-65%) and alanine aminotransferase (22-35%)
concentrations. |
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Treatment |
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In peracute and acute forms of the disease treat the
dehydration and shock first with fluids, and plasma or blood
transfusions if there is evidence of blood loss. |
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Antibiotics should be administered as soon as possible -
penicillin G or it's derivatives (e.g. ampicillin) are
usually recommended as the drugs of choice for treating
Leptospiraemia, followed by tetracyclines or one of the
other recommended antibiotics to eliminate the carrier
state. Other drugs that have been recommended include :
amoxicillin, erythromycin and doxycycline. |
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An antiserum is available for administration to infected
dogs. |
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Prognosis |
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The prognosis is guarded. |
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Postmortem |
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Many findings can result from leptospirosis including
enlargement of various organs (tonsils, lymph nodes,
kidneys, liver) with surface haemorrhages (petechiae or
eccymoses) and pale discolouration of affected organs -
notably kidney, liver and lungs. |
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Leptospires can be cultured from kidney tissue, but special
silver staining techniques are needed to identify them in
tissue sections. |
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© Provet. Winterpaws gratefully thanks Provet in letting us
reproduce this article "Leptospires". |
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