Moving reptiles?  Use our snake and lizard quarantine PCR panel to avoid spreading contagious agents.

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In over your head? Try our waterborne pathogens PCR panel - detection of 7 different environmental pathogens by real time PCR.

Something fishy going on in your tanks? Try our Zebrafish screening PCR panel - tests for 6 different pathogen categories from one easy-to-collect sample.

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Balantidium coli PCR test
wildlife and zoo assay data sheet

Balantidium coli

Test code:
X0062 - Ultrasensitive qualitative detection of Balantidium coli by real time PCR

Balantidium coli (also known as Neobalantidium coli or Balantioides coli) is a large ciliated protozoan parasite belonging to the phylum Ciliophora. It is the only ciliate known to cause disease in humans, called balantidiasis or balantidiosis. Clinical manifestations range from asymptomatic to severe dysentery-like illness.

Pigs are the primary reservoir host, where infections are typically asymptomatic. Humans are accidental hosts, although the parasite can also infect other animals such as non-human primates, cattle, and camels.

The parasite moves using hair-like structures called cilia. It features a distinctive kidney-shaped macronucleus and a smaller micronucleus. Balantidium coli has a direct life cycle with two main stages.

Cyst stage: The infective, dormant form excreted in feces. Cysts are environmentally resistant and can survive for weeks in suitable conditions.

Trophozoite stage: The active, feeding form that resides in the large intestine (colon and appendix).

After ingestion of cysts (usually via contaminated food or water), they excyst in the small intestine. The released trophozoites migrate to the large intestine, where they multiply by binary fission, and occasionally through conjugation. Trophozoites may remain in the intestinal lumen, invade the colonic mucosa causing ulcers, or encyst before being passed in the stool. Both cysts and trophozoites can appear in feces, but cysts are the primary stage responsible for transmission.

Transmission occurs via the fecal-oral route, most commonly through ingestion of food or water contaminated with cysts from pig or human feces in areas with poor sanitation. Risk is higher in individuals with close contact with pigs or those engaged in pig farming. The infection is more prevalent in tropical and subtropical regions with inadequate hygiene practices. Human-to-human transmission is possible but not frequent.

Most infected individuals remain asymptomatic. However, in immunocompromised people or those with heavy parasite burdens symptoms can include diarrhea, abdominal pain or cramps, nausea, vomiting, and weight loss. In severe cases, the parasite may cause colonic ulcers, intestinal perforation, or extraintestinal spread to other organs. Tissue invasion is facilitated by enzymes such as hyaluronidase.

Diagnosis was traditionally made by microscopic identification of the characteristic large trophozoites or cysts in stool samples. However, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is now a highly sensitive and specific alternative. PCR can detect parasite DNA even when microscopic forms are scarce or degraded, for example in non-fresh samples or low parasite loads. Studies have shown that PCR identifies significantly more positive cases than conventional microscopy (Byun et al., 2021). Molecular techniques also help differentiate B. coli from morphologically similar ciliates to reduce false-positive results (García-Rodríguez et al., 2022).

Utilities:

  • Help confirm the disease causing agent
  • Shorten the time required to confirm a clinical diagnosis of Balantidium coli infection
  • Help ensure that herds are free of this parasite 
  • Early prevention of spread of this parasite
  • Minimize occupational exposure to this parasite
  • Safety monitoring of biological products and vaccines that derive from susceptible animals

References:

Byun JW, Park JH, Moon BY, Lee K, Lee WK, Kwak D, Lee SH. Identification of Zoonotic Balantioides coli in Pigs by Polymerase Chain Reaction-Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) and Its Distribution in Korea. Animals (Basel). 2021 Sep 10;11(9):2659.

García-Rodríguez JJ, Köster PC, Ponce-Gordo F. Cyst detection and viability assessment of Balantioides coli in environmental samples: Current status and future needs. Food Waterborne Parasitol. 2022 Jan 5;26:e00143.

Specimen requirement: 2 ml of feces; or rectal swab; or 10 ml of soil; or 10 ml of water, or used water filter media; or environmental swabs or swipes.

Contact Zoologix if advice is needed to determine an appropriate specimen type for a specific diagnostic application. For specimen types not listed here, please contact Zoologix to confirm specimen acceptability and shipping instructions.

For all specimen types, if there will be a delay in shipping, or during very warm weather, refrigerate specimens until shipped and ship with a cold pack unless more stringent shipping requirements are specified. Frozen specimens should be shipped so as to remain frozen in transit. See shipping instructions for more information.

Turnaround time: 2 business days

Methodology: Qualitative real time PCR

Normal range: Nondetected

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