Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How to understand leishmaniasis qPCR test results in dogs
By Martínez, Verónica et al.·Published in Parasites & vectors·2011·Departament de Ciè, Spain·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Canine leishmaniasis: the key points for qPCR result interpretation.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study looked at 710 dogs living in an area where leishmaniasis is common, and 40% showed symptoms like weight loss and skin issues. They found that while many dogs tested positive for the infection, only a small percentage were actually sick. The researchers highlighted that using a specific blood test called qPCR can help confirm the disease, especially in dogs with unclear results from another test. This method is useful for diagnosing and monitoring treatment in dogs that may not show obvious signs of illness.
People also search for: dog leishmaniasis symptoms · qPCR test for dog leishmaniasis · treating leishmaniasis in dogs
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diagnosis and follow up of CanL is difficult since the range of clinical signs is varied and seroprevalence is high in endemic areas. The aims of this study were: i) demonstrate the advantages of Leishmania qPCR to diagnose and control CanL and highlight its prognostic value and ii) propose guidelines for tissue selection and infection monitoring. FINDINGS: This study included 710 dogs living in an endemic area of leishmaniasis. Forty percent (285/710) exhibited clinical signs consistent with CanL. Infection was detected in 36.3% (258/710) of the dogs of which 4.5% (32/710) were detected by qPCR, 16.2% (115/710) detected by ELISA and 15.6% (111/710) tested positive for both tests. Only 17.9% (127/710) of the dogs were classified sick (affected) with CanL. All symptomatic dogs with medium or high ELISA titers were qPCR-positive in blood samples. All dogs with inconclusive or low ELISA results with high or medium qPCR parasitemia values developed the disease. Seventy one percent of asymptomatic ELISA-positive dogs confirmed by qPCR (medium to high parasitemia) developed the disease. Bone marrow or lymph node aspirate should be selected to ensure the absence of the parasite in asymptomatic dogs: 100-1,000 parasites/ml in bone marrow are detectable in blood, whereas lower parasite loads are usually negative. Almost 10% of negative samples in blood were positive in conjunctival swabs. CONCLUSIONS: Because qPCR allows parasite quantification, it is an effective tool to confirm a diagnosis of CanL in (i) cases of inconclusive ELISA results, (ii) when the dog has not yet seroconverted, or (iii) for treatment monitoring.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21489253/