- Brucella canis
Related to the crippling "
Brucella abortus ", "Brucella canis" affects dogsthrough feeding, close contact, bodily fluids, and contaminated products. It causes brucellosis in dogs.Researchers have discovered the potential that "Brucella canis" might be a zoonotic organism. Signs of this disease are different in both genders of dogs; females who have Brucella Canis face an abortion of their pre-devolped fetus. Males face the chance of infertility; the reason is that they develop an antibody against the sperm. This may be followed by inflammation of the testes which will generally settle down a little while after. Symptoms do not only include testicular inflammation, infertility in males, and abortion in females. Another symptom is the infection of the spinal plates or
vertebrae , which is calleddiskospondylitis .Treatment for "B. canis" is very hard to find; but when you do find some, it is often very expensive. The combination of minocycline and streptomycin is "thought" to be useful, but it is often unaffordable. Tetracyline can be a less expensive substitute for minocycline, but it also lowers the effect of the treatment. However, dogs with
Brucella canis should be handed with full body protection because the "Brucella " family is a zoonotic organism and has a higher chance of mutating rather than bacteria because they are eukaryotic. Contamination will result in potential mutation of the organism and may harm the victim.External links
* [http://patric.vbi.vt.edu/genome/overview.php?genomeId=3958 "Brucella canis" str. ATCC23365] (from [http://patric.vbi.vt.edu/ PATRIC] the PathoSystems Resource Integration Center, a [http://www3.niaid.nih.gov/ NIAID] Bioinformatics Resource Center)
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