Abstract: Nocardioform placentitis in horses is poorly understood, and the development of an experimental model would be of help in understanding the pathogenesis of the disease. Objective: To investigate whether (1) intrauterine inoculation of Crossiela equi during the periovulatory period or (2) i.v., oral or intranasopharyngeal inoculation of C. equi during midgestation would result in nocardioform placentitis, and (3) before and after mating endometrial swabs present evidence of nocardioform placentitis-associated organisms (C. equi or Amycolatopsis spp.). Methods: In Study I, mares (n = 20) received an intrauterine inoculation of C. equi 24 h after artificial insemination. Endometrial swabs were obtained 24 h post inoculation for PCR analysis. In Study II, pregnant mares (at 180-240 days of gestation) were inoculated with C. equi by intranasopharyngeal (n = 5), oral (n = 4) or i.v. (n = 4) routes. Sixty contemporaneous pregnant mares maintained on the same farm served as control animals. In Study III, privately owned Thoroughbred mares (n = 200) had endometrial swabs collected before and within 24-48 h after mating for detection of nocardioform microorganisms. Results: In Study I, C.equi was identified by PCR in 3 of 20 mares following intrauterine inoculation. Pregnancy was established in 19 of 20 treated mares. There were 2 embryonic losses and one abortion at 177 days of gestation (undetermined cause). Sixteen mares delivered a normal foal and placenta. In Study II, one mare (oral inoculation) aborted at 200 days of gestation (unidentified cause). The remaining mares delivered a normal foal and placenta. In Study III, none of the mares yielded positive endometrial PCR for nocardioform microorganisms. Conclusions: We were unable to induce nocardioform placentitis, and there was no evidence of nocardioform microorganisms in endometrial swabs of broodmares before or after mating. These findings suggest that nocardioform placentitis is not induced simply via the presence of nocardiform actinomycetes and that route, insufficient duration of exposure and dose may play a role in the development of disease. Additional predispositions may also be involved in the development of nocardioform placentitis.
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The research investigates the impact of inducing nocardioform placentitis in horses under different conditions and methods. Despite multiple attempts, the researchers were unable to trigger nocardioform placentitis, thereby suggesting that the disease is not caused solely by the presence of nocardiform actinomycetes, and other variables may play a role in its development.
Methods Used
The study was conducted in three parts. In Study I, 20 mares were artificially inseminated and then given an intrauterine injection of Crossiela equi, a bacteria associated with nocardioform actinomycetes. Endometrial swabs were collected post inoculation for PCR analysis.
In Study II, pregnant mares at 180-240 days of gestation were subjected to Crossiela equi inoculation through three different routes – orally, intravenously and via the nasopharynx.
Study III involved collecting endometrial swabs both before and after mating from 200 privately-owned Thoroughbred mares, to detect the presence of nocardioform microorganisms.
Results Derived
In Study I, only 3 in 20 mares tested positive for Crossiela equi post-inoculation. There were 2 embryonic losses and one abortion, but the cause could not be determined. 16 mares delivered a normal foal and placenta.
In Study II, only one mare (from the oral inoculation group) aborted at 200 days of gestation with an unidentified cause. The other mares delivered a normal foal and placenta.
In Study III, none of the 200 mares showed evidence of nocardioform microorganisms in their endometrial swabs.
Conclusions
The research failed to induce nocardioform placentitis in the mares, regardless of the method of exposure to Crossiela equi.
There was also no evidence of nocardioform microorganisms in the endometrial swabs of broodmares before or after mating, refuting the idea that these microorganisms alone can cause nocardioform placentitis.
These findings suggest that factors like the route of crossiela equi exposure, the duration of exposure, and dosage might play significant roles in the development of nocardioform placentitis. There might also be other unknown predispositions involved in the disease’s occurrence.
Cite This Article
APA
Canisso IF, Ball BA, Erol E, Claes A, Scoggin KE, McDowell KJ, Williams NM, Dorton AR, Wolfsdorf KE, Squires EL, Troedsson MH.
(2014).
Attempts to induce nocardioform placentitis (Crossiela equi) experimentally in mares.
Equine Vet J, 47(1), 91-95.
https://doi.org/10.1111/evj.12249