Oocyst-Induced Toxoplasma gondii Infections in Cats
- 1 October 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of Parasitology
- Vol. 75 (5) , 750-755
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3283060
Abstract
To investigate the oocyst-induced cycle with a 21 + day prepatent period, 32 cats were fed 5 .times. 10 to 2 .times. 107 sporulated oocysts of Toxoplasma gondii and necropsied between 4 hr and 41 days thereafter. The presence of the earliest stages in 7 cats was tested in mice. The tissues of 25 cats were studied histologically; 17 were bioassayed by feeding them to cats to determine, by the length of the prepatent period, whether bradyzoites were present. Based on previous studies, a short (3-10 days) prepatent period indicated that bradyzoites were present in an oral inoculum and a long (> 21 days) prepatent period indicated the presence of tachyzoites only. Tissues from 14 cats were also bioassayed in mice for the presence of bradyzoites, using their resistance to pepsin as indicator. Six were studied by both methods. Based on these criteria, tachyzoites predominated in extraintestinal organs during the first 14 days after infection. They were found as early as 4 hr in mesenteric lymph nodes where their number reached 104 after 6 and 9 days; they were present after 1 day in all levels of the small intestine and after 6 days in the liver, lung, and blood. Bradyzoites were first detected 10 days after oocyst feeding; they predominated by the third week of infection and were present up to 41 days. Enteroepithelial stages were found histologically only in 2 cats, 24 and 41 days after inoculation. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that after feeding oocysts, T. gondii multiplies first as tachyzoites followed after 10-15 days by the development of bradyzoites in tissue cysts, which after variable intervals may initiate the enteroepithelial cycle.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Quantitative Survival of Toxoplasma gondii Tachyzoites and Bradyzoites in Pepsin and in Trypsin SolutionsAmerican Journal of Veterinary Research, 1981