Publication | Open Access
Hemorrhagic Enteritis Associated with Clostridium perfringens Type A in a Dog.
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Citations
5
References
1999
Year
Jejunal ContentsType AHemorrhagic Enteritis AssociatedPathogenesisVeterinary PathologyVeterinary SciencePathologyGastroenterologySudden DeathSmall Animal Internal MedicineVeterinary MicrobiologyGastrointestinal PathologyMicrobiologyInfection ControlGross Pathological ChangeMedicineClinical Microbiology
A female Shetland sheep dog died suddenly with hemorrhagic diarrhea and vomitting, and was examined pathologically and microbiologically. Gross pathological change was restricted to the intestinal tract. The intestine contained watery, blood-stained fluid. Histopathologically, the principal intestinal lesion was superficial mucosal hemorrhagic necrosis at the jejunoileum. Many Gram-positive bacilli were found adhering to the necrotic mucosal surface in parts of the intestinal tract. Clostridium perfringens in pure culture were isolated from jejunal contents by anaerobic culture. These results suggested that the typical lesion of this case coincided with canine hemorrhagic enteritis and enterotoxemia due to C. perfringens infection could be the cause of sudden death.
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