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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Severe microfilaria infection in four dogs and related health issues

By Wysmołek, Magdalena E et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2020·Department of Pre-Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Case Studies of Severe Microfilaremia in Four Dogs Naturally Infected Withas the Primary Disease or a Disease Complicating Factor.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Four dogs were found to have extremely high levels of microfilariae, which are tiny larvae from heartworms, during treatment for other health issues. One dog had serious complications due to a very high count of adult heartworms, while the other three were diagnosed incidentally when being treated for different conditions. The highest level recorded was an astonishing 178,000 microfilariae per milliliter of blood. This situation highlights the importance of testing for heartworm disease, even when dogs are being treated for other problems, as it can lead to serious health risks.

People also search for: dog heartworm symptoms · high microfilariae count in dogs · treating heartworm in dogs · dog with heartworm complications

Abstract

Subcutaneous dirofilariosis in dogs, caused by, is an underdiagnosed disease, now recognized for its zoonotic potential, and growing distribution and prevalence across Europe and Asia. Our understanding of the pathogenicity in human and canine host remains unclear, but case reports suggest that microfilariae (Mf) as well as adultmay directly cause internal organs damage or may be a factor complicating the course of other ailments. The purpose of the study was to report high Mf in dogs and to discuss potential relevance with co-morbidity. Our data from a modified Knott's test performed on 62 infected dogs indicate that the median Mf count ininfections is 675 Mf/ml and we consider microfilaremia above 10,000 Mf/ml as high intensity. This collection of case reports discusses 4 cases of high intensitymicrofilaremia in companion dogs; one presenting pathology from a very high intensity of adultwith post-treatment complications, and 3 dogs in which high microfilaremia was detected incidentally during the management of other primary illnesses. To our knowledge this report describes the highestmicrofilaremia ever detected in a dog, at 178,000 Mf/ml. The issue of high microfilaremic infections in dogs is poorly studied and there is growing need to identify the presentation and understand the mechanisms of associated pathogenesis in the host-parasite relationship.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33195580/