Pathological description and immunohistochemical demonstration of ovine abortion associated with Toxoplasma gondii in Iran

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Abstract

The obligatory intracellular protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii is a major world wide cause of infectious ovine abortion. In some different diagnostic techniques that are being used to detect this pathogen in ovine fetuses, immunohistochemistry (IHC) is a very sensitive and expensive one. Histopathology is not truly a specific and sensitive test for Toxoplasma infection but it can be helpful to choose some suspected tissues for IHC. In this study 9.5% of 200 samples (aborted ovine fetuses internal organs such as brain, liver, heart, lung, kidney, spleen) (4.6∼14.4% with 95% CI) were positive in IHC with a very good logical agreement among different diagnostic techniques (κ = 0.73, 0.8) and with no significant difference among different fetal age groups (p > 0.05).

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APA

Rassouli, M., Razmi, G. R., Movassaghi, A. R., Bassami, M. R., & Sami, M. (2013). Pathological description and immunohistochemical demonstration of ovine abortion associated with Toxoplasma gondii in Iran. Korean Journal of Veterinary Research, 53(1), 1–5. https://doi.org/10.14405/kjvr.2013.53.1.001

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