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Topic:Ehrlichia

Ehrlichia is a genus of bacteria that can infect horses, leading to a condition known as equine ehrlichiosis. This disease is transmitted primarily through tick bites and is characterized by symptoms such as fever, lethargy, and edema. Ehrlichia affects the immune system by targeting white blood cells, which can result in various clinical manifestations depending on the severity of the infection. Diagnosis often involves serological tests and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect the presence of the bacteria. Treatment typically includes the administration of antibiotics, such as tetracyclines. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the pathogenesis, epidemiology, diagnosis, and treatment of Ehrlichia infections in horses.
Antibody response to Ehrlichia risticii and antibody reactivity to the component antigens in horses with induced Potomac horse fever.
Infection and immunity    October 1, 1989   Volume 57, Issue 10 2959-2962 doi: 10.1128/iai.57.10.2959-2962.1989
Dutta SK, Mattingly BL, Shankarappa B.The antibody response and the antibody reactivity to component antigens of Ehrlichia risticii were studied in horses with induced Potomac horse fever. These horses had no detectable antibodies to E. risticii in their preinoculation (PrI) sera by indirect fluorescent-antibody assay and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). All the horses exhibited typical disease features following experimental infection and responded with specific antibodies, as measured by ELISA and indirect fluorescent-antibody assay. A primary antibody response was detected in 70% of the horses, while a secondary-type ...
Equine ehrlichial colitis: effect of oxytetracycline treatment during the incubation period of Ehrlichia risticii infection in ponies.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1988   Volume 192, Issue 3 343-345 
Palmer JE, Whitlock RH, Benson CE.Equine ehrlichial colitis was experimentally induced in 18 ponies, using Ehrlichia risticii-infected blood. Four ponies (group 1) were treated with oxytetracycline (6.6 mg/kg of body weight, IV, q 12 h), beginning 14 hours before inoculation and continuing for 5 days after inoculation. Four additional ponies (group 2) were treated similarly for 10 days after inoculation. The remaining 10 ponies were used as nontreated, infected controls. Clinical disease was delayed in 3 group-1 ponies and in 4 group-2 ponies. Protective immunity developed in the remaining pony that did not develop clinical di...
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for Potomac horse fever disease.
Journal of clinical microbiology    January 1, 1987   Volume 25, Issue 1 31-36 doi: 10.1128/jcm.25.1.31-36.1987
Pretzman CI, Rikihisa Y, Ralph D, Gordon JC, Bech-Nielsen S.An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgM in natural and experimental infections of equids with Ehrlichia risticii was developed. Ehrlichial organisms purified from an infected mouse macrophage cell line were used as the antigen. IgM was separated from serum IgG by the expedient of spun-column chromatography, allowing the use of an indirect ELISA for quantitation of both IgG and IgM in the test sera. Among 16 paired sera from horses exhibiting clinical signs of Potomac horse fever, 8 were positive by the indirect fluorescent-antibody test (IFA), 11 were po...
Experimental reproduction of Potomac horse fever in horses with a newly isolated Ehrlichia organism.
Journal of clinical microbiology    August 1, 1985   Volume 22, Issue 2 265-269 doi: 10.1128/jcm.22.2.265-269.1985
Dutta SK, Myrup AC, Rice RM, Robl MG, Hammond RC.Potomac horse fever, a recently recognized disease of equines, characterized by high fever, leukopenia, and a profuse diarrhea, was studied for its etiology. An Ehrlichia organism was isolated in equine macrophage-fibroblast cell cultures and mouse macrophage cell cultures from the mononuclear cells of blood of infected horses. The agent was continuously propagated in mouse macrophage cell cultures. The organism multiplied in the cytoplasm of mouse macrophage cells and was identified by Giemsa staining, acridine orange staining, and by indirect immunofluorescence with convalescent sera from in...
[The 1st case of ehrlichiosis in a horse in Germany (Brief report)].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    November 22, 1984   Volume 91, Issue 11-12 408-409 
Büscher G, Gandras R, Apel G, Friedhoff KT.No abstract available
Experimentally induced infection of dogs, cats, and nonhuman primates with Ehrlichia equi, etiologic agent of equine ehrlichiosis.
American journal of veterinary research    January 11, 1975   Volume 36, Issue 1 85-88 
Lewis GE, Huxsoll DL, Ristic M, Johnson AJ.Dogs (German Shepherd Dogs and Beagles), cates, rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta), and baboons (Papio anubis) were inoculated with Whrlichia equi, the etiologic agent of equine ehrlichiosis. Within 3 to 7 days after inoculation, morulae were observed in the eosinophils of cats, neurtrophils of macaques and baboons, and in both neutrophils and eosinophils of dogs. The severe disease produced in horses by this agent was not a feature of E equi infection in dogs, cats, macaques, and baboons. However, a susceptible horse, inoculated with the pooled blood of 2 infected macaques, developed severe cli...