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Dog Disorders and Diseases
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  • Introduction to Disorders Affecting Multiple Body Systems of Dogs
  • Congenital and Inherited Disorders Affecting Multiple Body Systems of Dogs
  • Actinobacillosis in Dogs
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  • Botulism in Dogs
  • Canine Distemper (Hardpad Disease)
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  • Enterotoxemia in Dogs
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  • Glanders (Farcy) in Dogs
  • Infectious Canine Hepatitis
  • Leishmaniasis (Visceral Leishmaniasis) in Dogs
  • Leptospirosis in Dogs
  • Lyme Disease (Lyme Borreliosis) in Dogs
  • Melioidosis in Dogs
  • Neosporosis in Dogs
  • Nocardiosis in Dogs
  • Peritonitis in Dogs
  • Plague in Dogs
  • Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (Tick Fever) in Dogs
  • Salmon Poisoning Disease and Elokomin Fluke Fever in Dogs
  • Tetanus in Dogs
  • Toxoplasmosis in Dogs
  • Trichinellosis (Trichinosis) in Dogs
  • Tuberculosis in Dogs
  • Tularemia in Dogs
 
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Melioidosis in Dogs

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Melioidosis is a bacterial infection of humans and animals. The disease-causing agent is Burkholderia pseudomallei, which occurs in the soil throughout southeast Asia, northern Australia, and the South Pacific. The true boundaries of this organism are unclear, as it may cause sporadic disease and outbreaks in other temperate regions. Melioidosis outbreaks have coincided with heavy rainfall, flooding, and disturbances in plumbing resulting in contamination of water supplies.

Melioidosis has been diagnosed in many animals, including dogs and humans. Species such as dogs and cats may succumb to infection due to a weakened immune system. Infection is normally transmitted from the environment to an animal rather than from animal to animal. The most common routes of infection are via skin inoculation, contamination of wounds, ingestion of soil or contaminated carcasses, or inhalation.

Signs can vary widely, and infection without signs is common. Infection may be associated with single or multiple curd-like nodules or abscesses, which can be located in any organ. When the infection enters through the skin, it often develops at distant sites without evidence of active infection at the site of entry. Pneumonia is the most common form of the disease in both animals and humans. Lameness can occur. It is possible for an infection to lie dormant before becoming apparent. Death may result in animals with sudden and intense infections or when vital organs are affected.

Treatment can be expensive and prolonged. Treatment protocols adopted for human infections are expected to have more success than the usual approach using conventional veterinary antibiotics. There is a risk that signs will return after treatment is discontinued. It is possible that this disease involves suppression of the immune system, especially in species that are less susceptible to infection. In areas where the disease-causing bacteria exist, prevention involves providing your pet with housing and sleeping areas that are not exposed to soil and providing clean drinking water that has been chlorinated and filtered (most municipal water supplies meet these requirements). Other preventive steps include restricting your pet's access to the fecal material of other animals and dead animals in the environment.

Last full review/revision July 2011 by Otto M. Radostits, CM, DVM, MSc, DACVIM (Deceased); David A. Ashford, DVM, MPH, DS; Craig E. Greene, DVM, MS; Eugene D. Janzen, DVM, MVS; Bert E. Stromberg, PhD; Max J. Appel, DMV, PhD; Stephen C. Barr, BVSc, MVS, PhD, DACVIM; J. P. Dubey, MVSc, PhD; Paul Ettestad, DVM, MS; Kenneth R. Harkin, DVM, DACVIM; Delores E. Hill, PhD; Johnny D. Hoskins, DVM, PhD; Jodie Low Choy, BVMS; Barton W. Rohrbach, VMD, MPH, DACVPM; J. Glenn Songer, PhD; Joseph Taboada, DVM, DACVIM; Charles O. Thoen, DVM, PhD; John F. Timoney, MVB, PhD, Dsc, MRCVS; Ian Tizard, BVMS, PhD, DACVM

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