Experimental acute Babesia caballi infections. I. Red blood cell dynamics.
1975
Abstract Hematological determinations were made on blood samples from six ponies acutely infected with two dosage levels of Babesia caballi (Group 1: divided into two subgroups of three ponies each). Similar determinations were made on blood samples from three premunized ponies given challenge inoculations (Group 2), and three equidae given uninfected red blood cells (Group 3). A trend towards decreases in RBC counts, hemoglobin concentrations, and hematocrits within one to four days after inoculation (AI) was observed in all groups. However, it was marked only in Group 1. In addition, only in Group 1 was there observed a concerted anemia occurring between Days 7 and 16. Those surviving ponies in Group 1 which developed a higher parasitemia between Days 5 and 6 AI (first parasitemia peak) developed a more severe anemia between Days 7 and 16. Ponies which developed parasitemias higher than 40 × 10 3 parasitized cells/mm 3 at the first parasitemia peak subsequently died. Free bilirubin in Group 1 animals increased immediately after inoculation, and repeatedly exceeded normal ranges until after Day 20 AI when the RBC counts were rising. Similar changes in free bilirubin did not occur in either Groups 2 or 3. Conjugated bilirubin levels did not exceed normal ranges in any of the experimental animals. Active erythrophagocytosis was evident in histological preparations of lymph node, spleen, liver, and lung from ponies which died. Cytosiderin pigment was present in liver parenchyma, and hematin was scattered throughout lymph nodes and spleen.
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