Trypanosoma cruzi-like flagellates were incidentally noted in blood smears of a routinely monitored rhesus monkey experimentally infected with the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV). Immunodeficiency in the course of the SIV infection reactivated a chronic infection of Chagas' disease that had been unnoticed when the macaque was imported to Europe. The animal developed no specific clinical symptoms of American trypanosomiasis, but histologically a chagasic myocarditis was detected. Analysis of the small subunit rRNA gene of the trypanosome identified the protozoan as T. cruzi. © 2002, American College of Veterinary Pathologists. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Kunz, E., Mätz-Rensing, K., Stolte, N., Hamilton, P. B., & Kaup, F. J. (2002). Reactivation of a Trypanosoma cruzi Infection in a Rhesus Monkey (Macaca mulatta) Experimentally Infected with SIV. Veterinary Pathology, 39(6), 721–725. https://doi.org/10.1354/vp.39-6-721
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