Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Babesia canis rossi infection severity and blood parasite levels
By Böhm, Marlies et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2006·Department of Companion Animal Clinical Studies·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Capillary and venous Babesia canis rossi parasitaemias and their association with outcome of infection and circulatory compromise.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 100 dogs infected with Babesia canis rossi, a parasite that can cause severe illness, were studied to see how the level of infection affected their chances of recovery. Dogs with higher levels of the parasite in their blood were more likely to have serious health issues and were at greater risk of dying. Out of the group, 50 dogs recovered after being hospitalized, while 40 were treated as outpatients, but 10 sadly did not survive. The findings suggest that checking for the parasite in capillary blood (from an ear prick) is more effective than in venous blood for diagnosing this infection.
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Abstract
This observational study of 100 dogs naturally infected with Babesia canis rossi determined whether severity of parasitaemia was associated with outcome of infection and documented the relative distribution of parasitised red blood cells (pRBC) in capillary and venous circulation. The association between increased parasitaemias and outcome with a clinically compromised circulation was also investigated. Outcome was defined as either hospitalisation with death, or hospitalisation with eventual recovery or treatment as an outpatient. Dogs were enrolled if large babesias were found on stained thin capillary blood smears made from an ear prick. Thin venous smears were prepared from jugular or cephalic blood. Parasitaemias were manually counted and expressed as the percent pRBC. Ten dogs died, 50 recovered after hospitalisation and 40 were treated as outpatients. Venous sampling site did not affect venous parasitaemia (P=0.6). Both capillary and venous parasitaemias of dogs that died were significantly higher than those of dogs that recovered after hospitalisation (P=0.002) and dogs that were treated as outpatients (P<0.0001). When assessing the whole group, capillary parasitaemia (median 0.61%, range <0.05-71.6%, interquartile range (IQR) 0.22-3.75%) was significantly higher than venous parasitaemia (median 0.14%, range 0-30.6%, IQR 0.046-0.52%) with P<0.0001. The 21 dogs with a clinically compromised circulation were more likely to die (P<0.0001) and had significantly higher capillary (median 5.98%, range 0.09-71.6%, IQR 2.44-19.41%) and venous (median 2.81%, range <0.05-30.6%, IQR 0.17-9.03%) parasitaemias than the 79 dogs with a clinically normal circulation (capillary median parasitaemia 0.38%, range <0.05-12.87%, IQR 0.16-1.42%; venous median parasitaemia 0.096%, range 0-6.13%, IQR <0.05-0.33%; P<0.0001). This study shows that high parasitaemia is significantly associated with death in B c rossi infected dogs. The previous clinical suspicion that capillary parasitaemias are usually higher than venous parasitaemias is confirmed. Thus capillary samples are the most appropriate diagnostic samples. Prior observations that a clinically compromised circulation is associated with death are confirmed. Despite the highly significant association between compromised circulation and higher parasitaemia, it is thought unlikely that parasite burden is the sole trigger for circulatory collapse.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16806713/