Abstract

This study documented the first outbreak of cerebral coenurosis in goats in Salalah, southern Oman. Deaths of 130 (16.6%) adult native goats in a herd (n=780) were reported from January to June 2017. Affected goats showed various nervous signs ended by death. Investigations for thiamine deficiency, polioencephalomalacia, caprine arthritis encephalitis, and listeriosis were negative. Upon necropsy, multiple (1-4) thin-walled cysts 2-3.5 cm in diameter containing clear fluid with numerous clusters of protoscolices in the cerebrum and cerebellum had replaced the brain parenchyma, causing space-occupying lesions. Parasitologically, the recovered cysts were Coenurus cerebralis, based on the arrangement of protoscolices, and the number and size of their hooks. Morphologically, each protoscolex had four suckers and a rostellum with double-crown hooks. The large and small hooks were 157.7±0.5 µm and 115±0.6 µm in length, respectively. Histopathologically, the parasite destroyed the affected tissues associated with multifocal to diffuse lymphocytic, non-suppurative meningoencephalitis; ischemic neuronal necrosis; and malacia. This is the first report of cerebral coenurosis in livestock in Oman, which should alert the local public health authorities for the application of prevention and control measures.

Highlights

  • Coenurosis is a parasitic disease of a great economic impact on various livestock worldwide, small ruminants

  • We aimed to investigate the potential role of C. cerebralis in such goat mortalities

  • Cerebral coenurosis is a serious disease of small ruminants (ING et al, 1998; LESCANO & ZUNT, 2013)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Coenurosis is a parasitic disease of a great economic impact on various livestock worldwide, small ruminants. Taenia multiceps is a taeniid cestode; its adult stage inhabits the small intestine of domestic and wild canids, the final host. Final hosts become infected with T. multiceps by eating animal tissues containing the larval stage and dispatch eggs in their feces. Intermediate hosts become infected by ingestion of eggs in food and water contaminated with

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call