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Infect Immun, June 1998, p. 2818-2821, Vol. 66, No. 6
Department of Veterinary Clinical Science and
Animal Husbandry, University of Liverpool, Leahurst, Neston, South
Wirral L64 7TE, England
Received 3 November 1997/Returned for modification 20 January
1998/Accepted 31 March 1998
Pregnant ewes were infected in midpregnancy with three isolates of
Chlamydia pecorum derived from the feces of healthy lambs from three different farms. Oral infection, alone or together with
Fasciola hepatica, did not result in tissue invasion, since all placental and fecal samples were negative for chlamydiae. Intravenous infection resulted in placental infection in 16 of 18 ewes
in that chlamydiae were cultured from placentas or vaginal swabs. Two
ewes bore dead lambs after a shortened gestation time. The chlamydiae
isolated were all C. pecorum. There were no
significant differences between the weights of the lambs from the
infected groups and those from uninfected control ewes. Most ewes
showed no serological evidence of infection by the complement fixation test; therefore, it is unlikely that the enteric subtype of
C. pecorum is responsible for the cross-reactions
sometimes seen in flocks being tested for C. psittaci
infection.
0019-9567/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Experimental Infection of Pregnant Ewes with
Chlamydia pecorum
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Veterinary Clinical Science and Animal Husbandry, University of
Liverpool, Leahurst, Neston, South Wirral L64 7TE, England. Phone: (44)
151 794 6023. Fax: (44) 151 794 6065. E-mail:
vm01{at}liv.ac.uk.
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