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Isolation of obligate anaerobic bacteria from ulcerative keratitis in domestic animals
Author(s) -
Ledbetter Eric C.,
Scarlett Janet M.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
veterinary ophthalmology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.594
H-Index - 50
eISSN - 1463-5224
pISSN - 1463-5216
DOI - 10.1111/j.1463-5224.2008.00610.x
Subject(s) - obligate anaerobe , anaerobic bacteria , keratitis , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , fusobacterium , microbiological culture , peptostreptococcus , fusobacteria , mycoplasma , corneal ulcer , bacteria , gram staining , anaerobic exercise , bacteroides , antibiotics , physiology , 16s ribosomal rna , bacteroidetes , genetics
Objective  To determine the frequency of obligate anaerobic bacterial isolation from corneal samples of domestic animals with ulcerative keratitis and to characterize the historical, clinical, cytological, and microbiological features of culture‐positive cases. Animals studied  Three hundred and thirty domestic animals with ulcerative keratitis. Procedures  Anaerobic bacteriologic culture and Gram stain were performed on corneal samples from consecutive animals examined with suspect septic ulcerative keratitis. Additional corneal diagnostics included: aerobic bacteriologic culture for all species; fungal culture for ungulates; Mycoplasma culture and virus isolation or feline herpesvirus‐1 (FHV‐1) polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for cats. Historical, clinical, and cytological findings were correlated with microbiologic data. Results  Anaerobic bacteria were isolated from 13.0% of corneal samples (dogs: 14.0%; horses: 12.9%; cats: 7.9%; alpacas: 18.8%). The most frequent isolates were Clostridium , Peptostreptococcus , Actinomyces , Fusobacterium , and Bacteroides species. The majority of these infections were mixed anaerobic and aerobic bacteria, unless antimicrobial therapy had been administered prior to presentation. The clinical appearance of anaerobic bacterial culture‐positive cases was highly variable. Ocular trauma, pre‐existing corneal disease, previous corneal surgery, and chronic dermatological disease were significantly ( P  ≤ 0.05) correlated with positive anaerobic cultures in one or more species. Conclusions  The results of the present study demonstrate that obligate anaerobic bacteria are present within the intralesional flora of ulcerative keratitis in domestic animals. In most species evaluated, these bacteria were identified infrequently. Anaerobic bacterial infection of the cornea most frequently occurs in association with other ocular pathogens and previous corneal abnormalities.

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