Abstract

Diagnosis and treatment of ocular fungal infection in equine seems very challenging for owners and clinicians. The present study aimed to identify and characterize fungal species isolated from the eyes of clinically healthy and diseased equines (N = 100) from Dakahlia Governorate, Egypt. The work also involved morphological and molecular characterization of the major fungal species. In addition, correlations between the occurrence of isolated fungi and some of the potential risk factors were also investigated. Interestingly, the prevalence rate of ocular mycosis in all examined equines in the study was 28% and there were major clinical signs associated with ocular fungal infection. Moreover, the identified fungal species included Aspergillus flavus, A. fumigatus, A. niger, Penicillium spp., Mucor spp., and Alternari spp. with a corresponding prevalence rate of 63.9%, 27.8%, 15.3%, 18.1%, 13.9%, and 4.2%, respectively, in healthy equine eyes, while their prevalence in diseased equine eyes was 57.1%, 32.1%, 21.4%, 7.1%, 3.6%, and 0%. Furthermore, a statistical significant association (p < 0.05) was found between the frequency of isolation of A. fumigatus and Penicillium and several risk factors (breed, sex, and ground type), while the remaining risk factors and occurrence of fungi were not statistically correlated. A subset of the Aspergillus species samples positive by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were sequenced and their phylogenetic analysis identified three species of Aspergillus. Taken together, our study provides novel data related to the occurrence of ocular mycosis in equine in Egypt. Given the zoonotic potential of some identified fungi, our data may be helpful for implementation of novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for combating this sight-threatening infection in equine.

Highlights

  • Ocular diseases and their related complications remain a serious health problem in equines worldwide [1]

  • All the parameters of heart rate, respiratory rate, and rectal temperature were within the normal range

  • The corneal epithelium and tear film of the eyes represent a major barrier for protection of equine eyes from many contaminates and from invasion by pathogens that include bacteria and fungi [31]

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Summary

Introduction

Ocular diseases and their related complications remain a serious health problem in equines worldwide [1]. The ocular surface in horses, mules, and donkeys is naturally inhabited by microorganisms that constitute its normal microflora [3] Scientists believe such flora play a defensive role against pathogenic microbes by depriving them from nutrients, producing antimicrobial substances, and occupying space on the corneal and conjunctival epithelium [4]. 38% of infectious keratitis cases in equines caused by fungal organisms are believed to be seeded from the environment, seasonal variation could affect the equine conjunctival microflora [7,8] These opportunistic pathogens, which include a wide range of fungi and bacteria, can be transmitted to humans and cause potential health risks [9]

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