Chlamydia abortus in aborted chorioallantoises of horses

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      A caution to pregnant women involved in equine reproduction.
      DrO

      J Vet Diagn Invest. 2023 May 2;
      Detection of Chlamydia abortus in aborted chorioallantoises of horses from Western Canada
      R Madison Ricard 1, Jaidyn Burton 1, Betty Chow-Lockerbie 1, Bruce Wobeser 1
      Affiliations expand
      PMID: 37129380 DOI: 10.1177/10406387231171844
      Abstract
      Chlamydiae are reported to cause abortion in several species, however the association between Chlamydia sp. and equine abortions is poorly understood. A zoonotic transfer event of C. psittaci from aborted equine tissues in Australia has emphasized the need to better understand the prevalence of this pathogen in equine populations. The prevalence of chlamydia in equine abortions in North America has not been investigated thoroughly. We examined 99 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded placental samples submitted between 2009 and 2020 from equine abortions in Western Canada using chlamydia-specific 16S rRNA conventional PCR testing; 26 of 99 submissions tested positive for chlamydial DNA. Most of these submissions (n = 17) had no final diagnosis noted on their original pathology reports. DNA sequencing identified 22 of the 26 cases as C. abortus; 21 of the 22 C. abortus-positive samples were positive on chlamydial immunohistochemistry. These findings contrast with studies in Europe that found a low prevalence of chlamydiae using similar methodology. The high prevalence of the potentially zoonotic C. abortus identified in our study suggests that more substantial biosecurity protocols may be warranted for equine foaling, abortion, and stillbirth in Western Canada to prevent zoonotic transfer of the pathogen.

      Keywords: Canada; Chlamydia abortus; abortion; chlamydia; horses; stillbirth.

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