Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Chronic liver inflammation in dogs with Leishmania infantum infection
By Rallis, T et al.·Published in Journal of comparative pathology·2005·Clinic of Companion Animal Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Chronic hepatitis associated with canine leishmaniosis (Leishmania infantum): a clinicopathological study of 26 cases.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 26 dogs with leishmaniosis (a disease caused by the Leishmania parasite) were examined after being humanely euthanized. Although none showed obvious signs of liver failure, blood tests revealed some had low protein levels and elevated liver enzymes. The liver samples showed different patterns of inflammation, indicating varying stages of liver damage due to the infection. Unfortunately, the study found no clear link between the severity of liver damage and factors like age or breed. Understanding these patterns can help veterinarians better manage dogs with chronic leishmaniosis and its effects on the liver.
People also search for: dog leishmaniosis symptoms · elevated liver enzymes in dogs · chronic hepatitis in dogs treatment
Abstract
Hepatic tissue samples were obtained from 26 dogs humanely destroyed because of naturally occurring leishmaniosis (Leishmania infantum). None of the animals had palpable hepatomegaly or any other physical finding or historical evidence indicative of liver failure. However, serum biochemistry revealed hypoalbuminaemia (6/26), increased alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity (15/26), and increased concentrations of total bilirubin (2/26) and post-prandial bile acids (4/26). Three main histological patterns were identified. In pattern 1 (3/26), the liver microarchitecture remained unchanged apart from the presence of individual or clustered macrophages in the sinusoids. In pattern 2 (20/26), there was multifocal, mild to moderate, granulomatous to pyogranulomatous infiltration of the hepatic parenchyma, particularly in the portal areas. Pattern 3 (3/26), which was the most severe form, was characterized by marked portal lymphoplasmacytic infiltration with occasional broaching of the limiting plate and extension into the adjacent parenchyma. In this pattern there was also mild portal fibrosis, together with lymphoplasmacytic aggregates within the parenchyma and small clusters of lymphocytes and plasma cells within the sinusoids. All three patterns were associated with hepatocyte vacuolation (15/26 dogs), and haemosiderin accumulation within the hepatocyte cytoplasm. Congestion was present in the liver of five dogs. No correlation was found between histopathological pattern and breed, sex, age, clinical manifestations, serum biochemical profile or parasite load in the hepatic tissue; patterns 1-3 may, however, represent sequential stages of hepatic leishmania infection during the chronic course of the disease.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15737341/