Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Kidney and eye damage in dogs with different stages of leishmaniasis
By Dos Santos, Roseclea Chagas et al.·Published in Veterinary research communications·2024·Teaching Hospital of Veterinary Medicine (HOSPMEV) of the Federal University of Bahia (UFBA), Brazil·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A compared histopathological study on kidneys and eye bulbs in distinct clinical presentations of canine leishmaniasis by Leishmania infantum.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 15 dogs with canine leishmaniasis (CanL) caused by Leishmania infantum were studied to understand how the disease affects their kidneys and eyes. Some dogs had mild to moderate symptoms, while others had severe disease that didn't respond to treatment. The dogs with severe disease showed more kidney damage, but surprisingly, those with milder symptoms had more eye problems like retinitis (inflammation of the retina). This suggests that eye issues can develop earlier than kidney problems in CanL, and while treatment may help with eye symptoms, it doesn't seem to work as well for kidney damage.
People also search for: dog leishmaniasis symptoms · canine kidney disease treatment · dog eye problems leishmaniasis
Abstract
Canine leishmaniasis (CanL) caused by Leishmania infantum commonly progresses with renal and ophthalmic lesions associated with active systemic disease. As chronic inflammation related to immune complex deposits is a pathophysiological factor in the development of both glomerulonephritis and uveitis, we aimed to evaluate renal and ocular histopathological lesions and analyze whether they were related to each other and the clinical degree of the disease. For that, we evaluated 15 dogs from CanL-endemic areas. L. infantum PCR-positive dogs were studied according to disease severity into two different groups: Group-1 (G1) had data from seven dogs with mild to moderate CanL and no history of treatment, and G2 was formed with eight dogs with severe to terminal disease that had not responded to CanL treatment. Histopathological analysis of kidneys showed higher frequencies and intensities of glomerular basement membrane thickening (p = 0.026), deposits in glomeruli (p = 0.016), epithelial necrosis (p = 0.020), tubular dilatation (p = 0.003) and interstitial fibrosis (p = 0.04) in G2 dogs than in G1 dogs. Surprisingly, the histopathology of eye bulbs showed a higher frequency and intensity of retinitis (p = 0.019) in G1 dogs than in G2 dogs. The comparative analysis showed that there was no correspondence between histopathological findings in kidneys versus eyes in milder or more severe CanL. Our findings suggested that (1) clinically undetectable eye alterations can be more precocious than those in kidneys in the development of CanL, and (2) the lower frequency of eye lesions and higher frequency of renal lesions in dogs with terminal disease even after treatment indicate that therapy may have been effective in reducing CanL-associated ophthalmic disease but not proportionally in reducing kidney disease.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38717733/