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Large granular lymphocytosis in a cynomolgus macaque ( Macaca fascicularis ) with a subclinical Trypanosoma cruzi infection
Author(s) -
Henderson Sally E.,
Pfeiffer Sara C.,
Novak Joseph,
Peace Tracy A.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
veterinary clinical pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.537
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1939-165X
pISSN - 0275-6382
DOI - 10.1111/vcp.12879
Subject(s) - trypanosoma cruzi , subclinical infection , lymphocytosis , biology , macaque , virology , immunology , chagas disease , cytopathology , pathology , medicine , paleontology , parasite hosting , genetics , cytology , world wide web , computer science
A 5.25‐year‐old cynomolgus macaque ( Macaca fascicularis ) was found to have a marked leukocytosis due to a lymphocytosis on routine quarantine laboratory data prior to inclusion in a preclinical research study. The majority of lymphocytes were characterized as intermediate to large with round to convoluted nuclei, coarse to clumped chromatin, rare prominent nucleoli, and moderate amounts of lightly basophilic cytoplasm that frequently contained small magenta granules and/or clear vacuoles. The animal had tested negative for several viruses and other etiologic agents found in nonhuman primates 1 week prior to shipment to the research facility. However, further evaluation of the blood smear revealed rare hemoflagellates, and later testing using real‐time PCR and ELISA was confirmatory for Trypanosoma cruzi ( T cruzi ). Trypanosoma cruzi is a zoonotic pathogen responsible for Chagas disease in people and can have negative consequences on study results when positive animals are inadvertently used for preclinical research. This case report describes a marked large granular lymphocytosis in an otherwise healthy macaque as the only indication of infection with T cruzi in an animal believed to be negative for the infection. Additionally, it highlights the diagnostic limitations of screening tests to rule out diseases in animals intended to be used in preclinical studies.