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High levels of congenital transmission of toxoplasma gondii in longitudinal and cross-sectional studies on sheep farms provides evidence of vertical transmission in ovine hosts

Williams, RH; Morley, EK; Hughes, JM; Duncanson, P; Terry, RS; Smith, JE; Hide, G

Authors

RH Williams

EK Morley

JM Hughes

P Duncanson

RS Terry

JE Smith



Abstract

Recent research suggests that vertical transmission may play an important role in sustaining Toxoplasma gondii infection in some species. We report here that congenital transmission occurs at consistently high levels in pedigree Charollais and outbred sheep flocks sampled over a 3-year period. Overall rates of transmission per pregnancy determined by PCR based diagnosis, were consistent over time in a commercial sheep flock (69%) and in sympatric (60%) and allopatric (41%) populations of Charollais sheep. The result of this was that 53·7% of lambs were acquiring an infection prior to birth: 46·4% of live lambs and 90·0% of dead lambs (in agreement with the association made between T. gondii and abortion). No significant differences were observed between lamb sexes. Although we cannot distinguish between congenital transmission occurring due to primary infection at pregnancy or reactivation of chronic infection during pregnancy, our observations of consistently high levels of congenital transmission over successive lambings favour the latter.

Citation

Williams, R., Morley, E., Hughes, J., Duncanson, P., Terry, R., Smith, J., & Hide, G. (2005). High levels of congenital transmission of toxoplasma gondii in longitudinal and cross-sectional studies on sheep farms provides evidence of vertical transmission in ovine hosts. Parasitology, 130(3), 301-307. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182004006614

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Mar 1, 2005
Deposit Date Aug 7, 2007
Publicly Available Date Aug 7, 2007
Journal Parasitology
Print ISSN 0031-1820
Publisher Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 130
Issue 3
Pages 301-307
DOI https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182004006614
Keywords Toxoplasma gondii, congenital transmission, ovine, abortion
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0031182004006614

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