ABSTRACT. For determination whether strangles has invaded the Hidaka district of Hokkaido, the main racehorse-breeding area of Japan, a epizootiological survey with bacterial isolation was carried out during the breeding season in 1995. Streptococcus equi subsp. equi, which is the causative agent of strangles, was isolated from two Thoroughbred horses with submandibular lymphadenitis. Isolates were identified by serological grouping, biochemical tests and analysis of cell surface proteins by Western immunoblotting. Through this survey, it revealed that S. equi subsp. equi has invaded the Hidaka district and that strangles has become prevalent in racehorse-breeding farms in this area. -KEY WORDS: equine, strangles, Streptococcus equi subsp. equi.
ABSTRACT. Although isolation of Rhodococcus equi from tracheobronchial aspirates is thought to be a definitive diagnosis of R. equi pneumonia in foals, virulence of isolates from the aspirates of infected foals remains obscure. In the present study, transtracheal aspirates were collected from thirty-one 1-to 6-month-old foals, which showed clinical signs of respiratory tract infection, and R. equi isolates were analyzed for the presence of virulence plasmids and virulence-associated antigens. Moreover, this method was compared with a serodiagnosis by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to evaluate the sensitivity of the ELISA. Of the 31 foals, 21 revealed positive cultures for R. equi. Of the 21 foals, 20 (95%) had an ELISA OD value of 0.3 (positive limit of this test) or higher at the initial medical examination. All of the isolates from the aspirates were virulent R. equi, which contained virulence plasmids and expressed virulence-associated antigens. In the remaining 10 foals showing a negative culture for R. equi, 3 foals had positive ELISA titers. Six foals died during the treatment, and necropsy revealed that 5 of the 6 foals had R. equi infection characterized by large abscesses in the lungs, and 3 of the 5 foals also had intestinal lesions. All clinical isolates from the lesions of the foals were virulent R. equi. These results support the assumption that isolates from the transtracheal aspirates of infected foals are virulent R. equi and the sensitivity of ELISA might demonstrate a serodiagnostic value for early diagnosis of R. equi infection in foals. -KEY WORDS: foal, Rhodococcus equi, tracheal aspirate, virulence.
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