Three Mycoplasma spp. were isolated from five colony bred laboratory dogs (Canis familiaris) obtained from a single vendor. Four of these animals were Beagles and one was a mongrel. Three displayed clinical signs of respiratory disease including dyspnea, chronic coughing and moist rales, while the other two dogs were observed during thoracic surgery to have macroscopic lesions suggestive of pneumonia. All five dogs were submitted for diagnostic necropsy during which they were cultured for bacteria and mycoplasma. Mycoplasma spp. having three distinct colonial forms were isolated from the lungs of each of the animals. These three isolates were sent to the National Cancer Institute Diagnostic Microbiology Laboratory and to the National Institutes of Health, NIAID, Mycoplasmology Laboratory. Neither laboratory could serotype these isolates against antisera to 73 Mycoplasma spp., including the common canine mycoplasmas, and nine Acholeplasma spp. Histologically, the bronchopneumonia was characterized by bronchiectasis, purulent bronchiolitis, bronchial and bronchiolar epithelial hyperplasia, chronic non-suppurative peribronchiolitis and perivasculitis, bronchiolitis obliterans, and acute to subacute purulent pneumonia. The similarity between the pathologic findings in these animals and those observed in respiratory mycoplasmosis of other species, e.g. the rat, suggests a causal relationship between the isolated mycoplasmas and the pulmonary disease observed in these dogs.
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