Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How marbofloxacin kills Leishmania in dog cells compared to other
By Vouldoukis, Ioannis et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2006·INSERM U511, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Canine visceral leishmaniasis: comparison of in vitro leishmanicidal activity of marbofloxacin, meglumine antimoniate and sodium stibogluconate.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study found that marbofloxacin, a medication for dogs, showed promise in killing the parasite that causes leishmaniasis, a serious disease in dogs. In tests, marbofloxacin was effective at eliminating the parasite from infected dog cells without causing harm to the cells themselves. This treatment worked better than some traditional options, which can be toxic and less effective. The researchers suggest that marbofloxacin could be a safer and more effective oral treatment for dogs suffering from leishmaniasis.
People also search for: dog leishmaniasis treatment · marbofloxacin for dogs · canine leishmaniasis medication
Abstract
The control of canine leishmaniasis largely depends on the success of treatment. Drugs currently available to treat this disease are toxic and partially effective. The curative effect of marbofloxacin, a third-generation fluoroquinolone developed for veterinarian individual treatment, was evaluated in vitro in the presence of Leishmania infantum promastigotes and dog-monocyte-derived macrophages; meglumine antimoniate and sodium stibogluconate were used as comparative treatments. We observed that the killing of Leishmania promastigotes and intracellular amastigotes by marbofloxacin was dose-dependent. We demonstrated that successful treatment of canine infected macrophages for 48 h was possible with 500 microg/ml of marbofloxacin. Leishmanicidal activity acted through a TNF-alpha and nitric oxide pathway and correlated with the generation of nitric oxide (NO(2)) production by monocytes derived macrophages from infected (23+/-5 microM) or healthy (21+/-6 microM) dogs, in comparison with NO(2) concentration in infected/non-treated macrophages (< 3 microM, P<0.01). This significant induced parasiticidal effect correlated with extensive elimination of amastigotes by macrophages derived from infected (11+/-5) and healthy dogs (6+/-2), when compared to infected/non-treated macrophages (530+/-105 and 472+/-86 amastigotes, respectively, P< 0.01). Marbofloxacin was shown to be non-toxic at 500 microg/ml in vitro and no cell apoptosis was observed. The molecule was able to induce a parasitic process after significant elimination of amastigotes in leishmania-infected dog macrophages. We propose that marbofloxacin, compared to standard chemotherapeutic agents (meglumine antimoniate and sodium stibogluconate), could be an effective and pragmatic oral route alternative to treat canine leishmaniasis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16242844/