Publications by authors named "Pabasara Weerarathne"

Cytauxzoonosis, a highly fatal tick-borne disease in domestic cats caused by , poses diagnostic and therapeutic challenges due to the inability to culture the parasite in vitro. This study aimed to artificially replicate infection and characterize in vitro replication kinetics. Concanavalin A-activated feline embryonal macrophages (Fcwf-4) were plated at 3-5 × 10 cells/mL and incubated with -positive blood samples from either a (1) chronically infected bobcat (), (2) chronically infected domestic cat, or (3) acutely infected domestic cat with clinical signs of cytauxzoonosis.

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Case Series Summary: This case series describes six cases involving seven cats naturally infected with in Indiana, USA. Medical records were retrospectively reviewed and all available information on signalment, history, clinical and diagnostic findings, treatment, outcome and pathology was reported. Cats infected with were domestic shorthairs, were aged between 2 and 9 years and all but one of the cats were male.

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Cytauxzoonosis is a fatal tick-borne disease in domestic cats caused by infection with the apicomplexan Cytauxzoon felis. Bobcats are the natural wild-vertebrate reservoirs for C. felis, and infections are typically subclinical and chronic in this species.

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Cytauxzoonosis is caused by (), a tick-borne parasite that causes severe disease in domestic cats in the United States. Currently, there is no vaccine to prevent this fatal disease, as traditional vaccine development strategies have been limited by the inability to culture this parasite in vitro. Here, we used a replication-defective human adenoviral vector (AdHu5) to deliver -specific immunogenic antigens and induce a cell-mediated and humoral immune response in cats.

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Cytauxzoonosis is an emerging tick-borne disease of domestic and wild felids produced by infection of an apicomplexan protozoan similar to spp. Transmitted by , lone star tick, and , American dog tick, infection of in cats is severe, characterized by depression, lethargy, fever, hemolytic crisis, icterus, and possibly death. Cytauxzoonosis occurs mainly in the southern, south-central, and mid-Atlantic United States in North America, in close association with the distribution and activity of tick vectors.

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