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Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation, Vol 13, Issue 5, 416-419
Copyright © 2001 by American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians


Case Reports

Granulomatous encephalitis in a neurologically impaired goat kid associated with degeneration of Neospora caninum tissue cysts

LG Corbellini, EM Colodel, and D Driemeier

Department of Pathology, Veterinary Faculty, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, RS, Brazil.

Congenital Neospora caninum infection was diagnosed in a Saanen goat from a farm in southern Brazil. The kid was unable to nurse and had difficulty rising, ataxia, and opistothotonos. The neurologic signs became more severe 3 days after birth, when it was euthanized. No gross lesions were observed at necropsy. Multifocal infiltrates primarily of mononuclear cells, nodular microgliosis, and perivascular cuffs of lymphocytes, plasma cells, and few neutrophils were observed in the brain, mostly in the cortex and adjacent to ventricles. Rare multinucleate giant cells were observed adjacent to inflammatory foci. Several tissue cysts with a thick wall that reacted strongly with polyclonal antiserum to N. caninum were in the cerebral cortex and medulla oblongata. Lesions were also present in heart, lungs, and liver, but N. caninum tachyzoites were not found. Distinguishing features in this goat kid included neurologic impairment resulting from congenital infection with N. caninum and the presence of granulomatous inflammation with rare giant cells associated with degeneration of tissue cysts.


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Clin. Microbiol. Rev.Home page
J. P. Dubey, G. Schares, and L. M. Ortega-Mora
Epidemiology and Control of Neosporosis and Neospora caninum
Clin. Microbiol. Rev., April 1, 2007; 20(2): 323 - 367.
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