Histoplasmosis in the lung of a race horse with yersiniosis.

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Abstract

A 4-year-old female thoroughbred race horse died of acute peritonitis caused by necrotizing granulomatous duodenitis. Yersinia enterocolitica was immunohistochemically demonstrated in macrophages in granulomas developed in the duodenum, lung, liver and abdominal lymph nodes. The yeast-like fungi were found in the cytoplasmic vacuoles of macrophages in the lung that infiltrated into the granulomas and surrounding alveoli with congestive edema. The yeast-like fungi were positively stained by Gomori-Grocott chromic acid methenamine silver stain and immuno-histochemically stained with anti-histoplasma antibody. In this case, it was considered that granulomas formed in the duodenum, lung, liver and abdominal lymph nodes were primarily caused by Yersinia enterocolitica due to idiopathic weakening of the immune system. Yeast-like fungi immunohistochemically identified as histoplasmas secondarily infected the lung. This is the first case regarded as equine histoplasmosis capsulati in Japan.

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APA

Katayama, Y., Kuwano, A., & Yoshihara, T. (2001). Histoplasmosis in the lung of a race horse with yersiniosis. The Journal of Veterinary Medical Science / the Japanese Society of Veterinary Science, 63(11), 1229–1231. https://doi.org/10.1292/jvms.63.1229

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