Journal article

Feline leprosy due to Candidatus ‘Mycobacterium tarwinense’: Further clinical and molecular characterisation of 15 previously reported cases and an additional 27 cases

CR O’Brien, R Malik, M Globan, G Reppas, C McCowan, JA Fyfe

Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery | SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD | Published : 2017

Abstract

Objectives: This paper, the first in a series of three on ‘feline leprosy’, provides a detailed description of disease referable to Candidatus ‘Mycobacterium tarwinense’, the most common cause of feline leprosy in Victoria, Australia. Methods: Cases were sourced retrospectively and prospectively for this observational study, describing clinical, geographical and molecular microbiological data for cats definitively diagnosed with Candidatus ‘M tarwinense’ infection. Results: A total of 145 cases of feline leprosy were scrutinised; 114 ‘new’ cases were sourced from the Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory records, veterinary pathology laboratories or veterinarians, and 31 cases w..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported in part by a grant from the Feline Health Research Fund. Carolyn O'Brien was supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship. Richard Malik was supported by the Valentine Charlton Bequest administered by the Centre for Veterinary Education, The University of Sydney.