1. Trichomonosis outbreak in a flock of canaries (Serinus canaria f. domestica) caused by a finch epidemic strain of Trichomonas gallinae
- Author
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Uroš Krapež, Brigita Slavec, Igor Gruntar, Marko Zadravec, Tanja Švara, Mateja Poljšak-Prijatelj, Mitja Gombač, and Joško Račnik
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary medicine ,Canaries ,Antiprotozoal Agents ,Administration, Oral ,Trichomonas Infections ,Trichomonas gallinae ,Disease Outbreaks ,Gross examination ,03 medical and health sciences ,Metronidazole ,biology.animal ,DNA, Ribosomal Spacer ,RNA, Ribosomal, 18S ,medicine ,Animals ,Typing ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Bird Diseases ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,DNA, Protozoan ,biology.organism_classification ,Passerine ,030104 developmental biology ,Trichomonas ,Parasitology ,Flock ,Serinus canaria ,RNA, Protozoan ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In the present paper, an outbreak of trichomonosis in a flock of 15 breeding pairs of canaries is described. Trichomonosis was diagnosed on characteristic clinical signs, microscopic examination of crop/esophageal swabs, gross pathology and histopathology. Trichomonads were successfully grown in culture media and were characterized by multi-locus sequence typing. The three genomic loci ITS1-5.8S-ITS2, 18S rRNA and Fe-hydrogenase were analyzed. Molecular characterization confirmed the finch trichomonosis strain, identical to the strain that caused emerging disease in free-living passerine birds in Europe. Flock treatment with metronidazole (200mg/L) in drinking water for 5days was partially effective. After individual treatment with oral application of metronidazole (20mg/kg SID) for 5days no further clinical signs were observed in the flock over next 30 months.
- Published
- 2017