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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Mast cells and skin changes linked to parasite levels in dogs

By Cardoso, Jamille Mirelle de Oliveira et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2017·Laborat&#xf3, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Association between mast cells, tissue remodelation and parasite burden in the skin of dogs with visceral leishmaniasis.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with visceral leishmaniasis (a disease caused by parasites) showed different skin symptoms based on how severely they were infected. Dogs with more severe symptoms had higher levels of parasites in their skin and more inflammation. Researchers found that certain immune cells called mast cells were more numerous in dogs with lower parasite loads, suggesting they might play a role in how the skin heals. Understanding these changes in the skin can help veterinarians better manage and treat dogs affected by this disease.

People also search for: dog skin problems leishmaniasis · canine visceral leishmaniasis symptoms · mast cells in dog skin disease

Abstract

Canine visceral leishmaniosis (CVL) is a zoonosis of major public health impact caused by organisms of the genus Leishmania which is transmitted to human and animals by phlebotomine sand flies. The skin is the first point of contact with Leishmania parasites for sandy fly vectors and it is considered an important reservoir compartment in infected dogs. The aim of this study was to determine the main histophatologic alterations in ear skin of dogs naturally infected by Leishmania infantum with different clinical status and different degrees of parasitism. Therefore, thirty-four dogs naturally infected with L. infantum were grouped according to their clinical status in asymptomatic (AD, n=11), oligosymptomatic (OD, n=11) and symptomatic dogs (SD, n=12) as well as their degrees of parasite load in the skin as low (LP, n=11), median (MP, n=11) and high (HP, n=12) parasitism. Additionally, ten dogs were used as control (CD, n=10). At necropsy, skin samples were collected for further histological and parasitological analysis. The OD and SD groups presented higher parasite burden than AD group. The inflammation was higher in SD group when compared to OD and AD. The LP, MP and HP groups showed an increasing inflammatory process, indicating that a great parasite load is accompanied by a major inflammatory process in the skin. The number of mast cells was higher in the OD and LP groups than CD group, suggesting that these cells may be involved in tissue remodeling, since that an increase of type III collagen fibers and decrease type I collagen fibers were observed in these groups. Taken together, our results enable a better understanding of the alterations in skin of CVL dogs and consequently new insights about the pathogenesis of CVL.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28807304/