Abstract:
Blood collected in either sodium heparin or disodium edetate vacutainers from febrile goats infected with 4 isolates of Cowdria ruminantium and cryopreserved with 10% dimethyl sulphoxide at -70⁰C and -196⁰C was an effective stabilate to initiate heartwater infections in goats. A homogenized pool of whole Amblyomma variegatum ticks in Snyder's buffer, maintained at -196⁰C, was used to infect a goat with C. ruminantium.
Liver and spleen collected from Swiss mice infected with the Kwanyanga isolate of C. ruminantium were
homogenized in Snyder's buffer, maintained at -196⁰C and were used to initiate infections in mice. Fresh blood
collected from febrile goats and maintained at 4⁰C for as long as 72 h was infectious to mice. Neutrophils
separated from blood of C. ruminantium infected goats and maintained in modified RPMI medium at 37⁰C for
68 h were infectious for a goat. Similarly neutrophils from a 2nd infected goat maintained for 96 h at 37⁰C were
infectious for mice.