Abstract
Q fever is a zoonosis caused by the intracellular bacterium Coxiella burnetii. In Europe, small ruminants are the main source of human Q fever. Small ruminant herds can be infectious during several lambing seasons. However, it is not clear how infection is maintained in a herd and what role non-pregnant animals play in the transmission of C. burnetii. We therefore inoculated nulliparous goats with C. burnetii, isolated from the outbreak of Q fever in the Netherlands, to gain a better understanding of the role of non-pregnant goats. Seroconversion and excretion of C. burnetii were monitored after inoculation. To study the effect of breeding on the excretion of C. burnetii, the goats were naturally bred and monitored during gestation and after lambing. Our results indicate that C. burnetii infection prior to breeding did not result in infection of the placenta nor did it affect the gestation length or the number of kids born. However, one of the ten does did excrete C. burnetii in the colostrum post-partum and the bacterium was detected in the mammary gland and associated lymph nodes at necropsy. This result indicates that non-pregnant goats might play a role in maintaining Q fever in a goat herd as persistent carriers of infection.
Highlights
Q fever is a zoonosis caused by the intracellular bacterium Coxiella burnetii
The goal of this study was to investigate C. burnetii infection and excretion in non-pregnant nulliparous goats up to the outcome of the first pregnancy and colostrum production in order to assess the role of non-pregnant goats in herd Q fever dynamics
As the inoculation with 106 mouse-infective dose (MID) C. burnetii in pregnant goats resulted in pathology, excretion of C. burnetii, abortion and seroconversion [7, 16], we assessed this procedure as successful and one of the representatives of the field situation, for that reason we used it to evaluate the goal in this study
Summary
Q fever is a zoonosis caused by the intracellular bacterium Coxiella burnetii. The zoonotic impact of the disease has been shown in various outbreaks [1,2,3]. The Dutch Q fever epidemic was the biggest outbreak reported so far, with 4029 registered human cases during the years 2007–2010 and more than 40 000 people assumed to be infected following (bio-aerosol) exposure [2, 4]. Clinical symptoms in humans vary from no symptoms at all to a flu-like, self-limiting disease, atypical pneumonia or hepatitis in the acute phase. In the chronic forms humans may suffer from a life-threatening endocarditis or chronic fatigue. 439 chronic Dutch Q fever patients are registered [5]
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