canine brucellosis disinfecting
Canine Brucellosis is a disease of the reproductive tract which
may cause abortion in females, infection of the sexual organs in males, and
infertility in both sexes. For this reason, if one should ever have a bitch
that aborts or has stillborn pups, the dead pups, membranes, placentas, etc.
should be handled with gloves and the area disinfected thoroughly. The bitch
that had the pups should be tested for Brucellosis as soon as possible to rule
out the disease as the cause for the stillborn litter.
Canine Brucellosis is caused by a bacteria of which there are
several different types that infect specifically cows, goats, pigs, horses,
sheep or dogs. Though there have been isolated incidences of dogs becoming infected
by contact with livestock infected with one of the other species of Brucella
bacteria, the bacteria that infects dogs specifically is called Brucella canis.
It is spread by contact with the semen or vaginal discharge of an infected dog
or bitch (most commonly during mating), by contact with mammary secretions and
aborted puppies, and can also possibly be spread by contact with urine or other
body secretions. In indoor kennel situations, it may even possibly be spread
by the airborne route. It can be contagious to humans, in whom it causes flu-like
symptoms.
Symptoms of Canine Brucellosis
Females: Abortion of litters, usually between 45-55 days after breeding, litters
with some pups born dead or dying immediately after birth, and pups that die
at the embryo stage and are reabsorbed -- in such cases it may appear that the
bitch didn't take.
Males: Inflammation of the epididymis, prostate and/or testicles (often leading
to testicular atrophy), infertility because of abnormal sperm and poor sperm
motility, and reluctance to breed due to pain caused by inflammation of the
sex organs. Males may also cause lesions by licking at the painful area.
Both sexes: Swollen lymph nodes. Some dogs may show non-specific signs of poor
health, such as poor vigor. In rare cases the disease has caused damage to the
kidneys and nervous system.
Perhaps the most dangerous aspect of the disease is it's insidiousness; the
above symptoms are not always seen -- in many cases an infected dog may show
no outward signs at all. Infected bitches will have normal heat cycles and breed
normally, in fact in many cases a bitch infected with Brucellosis, after aborting
a litter, may conceive and whelp a live litter subsequently. The danger in this
is that such a bitch can infect any males she is bred to, and her puppies will
most likely be carriers of the disease and go on to infect other dogs.
Most experts estimate 1% to 6% of the canine population are infected, with
the main source of the disease being stray dogs. There is no vaccine for this
disease in dogs, and treatment, which usually consists of prolonged administration
of Tetracycline and Streptomycin, may not be effective. The only prevention
is to have all broodstock tested for the disease before breeding. The test for
the disease is a simple and relatively inexpensive blood test. Many veterinarians
will say that the test is unnecessary because the disease is very uncommon;
but while it is true that Brucellosis is not very prevalent to begin with (and
probably even rarer in bulldogs than many other breeds because dogs are kept
isolated from each other, so it doesn't t get spread by grown dogs being kenneled
together) we would still recommend having breeding dogs tested for the disease.
Canine Brucellosis is a very serious disease, not because dogs are very likely
to contract the disease, but because of the consequences if a dog does become
infected. The disease itself will not kill your dog, but your dog will be genetically
‘dead because he or she will be unbreedable -- even if the disease does
not render the dog sterile. A dog that has tested positive for Brucellosis should
not be bred, not even by artificial insemination. Bringing one infected dog
into a breeding program could wipe out years of work establishing a family of
dogs.
Additionally, because of the threat of transmitting the disease to humans,
if you have a dog that tests positive for the disease in some states the health
department can demand the dog be destroyed. The disease is most often transmitted
to a human being by handling aborted pups from a bitch with Brucellosis. For
this reason, if one should ever have a bitch that aborts or has stillborn pups,
the dead pups, membranes, placentas, etc. should be handled with gloves and
the area disinfected thoroughly. The bitch that had the pups should be tested
for Brucellosis as soon as possible to rule out the disease as the cause for
the stillborn litter.
We used to believe ourselves that the test was unnecessary until 1992 when
we had a little 'close encounter' with Brucellosis. We got a letter in 1991
from a guy in the Midwest who had a very well-bred bitch he wanted to breed
to our Bandit dog; if we remember correctly he told us the bitch had just been
bred but didn't take. When she came in heat again, he was not in a position
to ship her out to be bred at that particular time, he wrote to us that he d
bred to a different dog locally but he still wanted to breed her to Bandit her
next heat. We didn't hear from him again for almost a year, when he wrote us
a letter to let us know that the reason he never got back to us was that his
bitch had missed again the second time he'd bred her, so he took her to a veterinarian
and it turned out she had Brucellosis!
Had he shipped her to us to be bred to Bandit, who at the time was our main
stud dog, we in turn probably would have infected most of our brood bitches
before we discovered we had Brucellosis on the yard. From that point on, we
have made a point of routinely having our own dogs tested, any new dogs we add
to the yard, and any outside bitches that are bred to our studs -- even if they'd
never been bred before. It's a bit of an inconvenience and to be honest, we've
probably lost a few outside stud fees from people who either didn't want to
go through the aggravation, or their vet discouraged them when they asked about
the test and told them it was a waste of money, or they were insulted that we'd
suspect their dog of having some disease.
We hope the information in this article helps promote a better understanding
of this disease and shows that in the case of Canine Brucellosis, it s definitely
a matter of 'better safe than sorry'.