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Prevalence, co-infection and seasonality of fecal enteropathogens from diarrheic cats in theRepublic of Korea (2016–2019): a retrospective study

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Authors

Oh, Ye-In; Seo, Kyoung-Won; Kim, Do-Hyung; Cheon, Doo-Sung

Issue Date
2021-12-01
Publisher
BMC
Citation
BMC Veterinary Research. 2021 Dec 01;17(1):367
Keywords
DiarrheaFelineInfectionReal-time PCR
Abstract
Background
Diarrhea is one of the most common clinical symptoms in cats and can be caused by infectious pathogens and investigation of the prevalence, co-infection and seasonality of enteropathogens are not well-established in diarrheic cats.

Results
Fecal samples of 1620 diarrheic cats were collected and enteropathogens were detected using real-time PCR. We retrospectively investigated the clinical features, total/seasonal prevalence, and infection patterns of enteropathogens. The positive infection rate was 82.59%. Bacterial, viral, and protozoal infections accounted for 49.3, 37.57, and 13.13% of cases, respectively. Feline enteric coronavirus (FECV) was the most common pathogen (29.37%), followed by Clostridium (C.) perfringens, Campylobacter (C.) coli, feline parvovirus, and Tritrichomonas foetus. The seasonality of enteropathogens was observed with peaks as follows: bacterial infections peaked in October, viral infections peaked in November, and protozoal infections peaked in August. Viral and protozoal infections showed differences in prevalence according to patient age. In the infection patterns, the ratios of single infections, mixed infections, and co-infections were 35.72, 9.87, and 54.41%, respectively. FECV was predominant in single infections. The most common patterns of multiple infections were C. perfringens and C. coli in mixed infections and C. perfringens and FECV in co-infections.

Conclusions
Infection patterns differed according to the enteropathogen species, seasonality, and age distribution in cats. The results of this study might be helpful to understand in clinical characteristics of feline infectious diarrhea. In addition, continued monitoring of feline enteropathogens is required.
ISSN
1746-6148
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/177021
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12917-021-03075-6
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