In 1969, five cases of melioidosis in three separate outbreaks were diagnosed in nonhuman primates in the United States. In the first outbreak, two stump-tailed macaque monkeys (Macaca arctoides) developed signs of the disease approximately 6 months after purchase. A third animal, a chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes), probably acquired its infection from one of these monkeys. Two other unrelated cases involving a pig-tailed monkey (Macaca nemestrina) and a rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatto) were diagnosed. These monkeys had been imported 3 years and 6 months, respectively, prior to the recognized onset of their disease. These cases represent the first known occurrences of spontaneous melioidosis in nonhuman primates in the United States.
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1 October 1970
Melioidosis in Imported Non-Human Primates
ARNOLD F. KAUFMANN,
AARON D. ALEXANDER,
ANTON M. ALLEN,
RICHARD J. CRONIN,
LLOYD A. DILLINGHAM,
JACK D. DOUGLAS,
THOMAS D. MOORE