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1 April 1991 Iatrogenic Transmission of Cytauxzoon felis from a Florida Panther (Felix concolor coryi) to a Domestic Cat
Mark T. Butt, Dwight Bowman, Margaret C. Barr, Melody E. Roelke
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Abstract

A laboratory cat died 12 days after intraperitoneal inoculation of a 1 ml suspension containing 1.5 × 106 blood mononuclear cells from a Florida panther (Felis concolor coryi). Gross, histologic and ultrastructural investigations revealed the cause of death to be infection by Cytauxzoon felis, a protozoal parasite known to cause a rapidly fatal disease (cytauxzoonosis) in domestic cats. The bobcat (Felis rufus) has been identified as a natural host for C. felis. This report implicates the Florida panther as another possible host for C. felis.

Mark T. Butt, Dwight Bowman, Margaret C. Barr, and Melody E. Roelke "Iatrogenic Transmission of Cytauxzoon felis from a Florida Panther (Felix concolor coryi) to a Domestic Cat," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 27(2), 342-347, (1 April 1991). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-27.2.342
Received: 22 May 1990; Published: 1 April 1991
KEYWORDS
Cytauxzoon felis
cytauxzoonosis
Felis concolor coryi
Florida panther
iatrogenic infection
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