Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cat imported from Thailand with multiple parasite infections
By Mahjoub, Haifaa A et al.·Published in The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne·2026·Department of Biological Sciences, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Clinical co-parasitic infections in a cat imported from Thailand.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A stray cat imported from Thailand was brought to a veterinary clinic in Canada just five days after arriving, showing signs of parasitic infection. The cat was treated with a deworming medication and passed a large mass of tapeworms shortly after. Fecal tests revealed multiple types of parasites, and the cat received a two-day treatment followed by a five-day course of additional medication. After treatment, the cat was free of parasites, but it shed eggs again 40 days later, requiring another round of deworming. The cat is now healthy and no longer shows signs of infection.
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Abstract
Animal welfare benefits associated with international pet rescue and adoption are somewhat offset by increased potential for introduction and spread of foreign pathogens. This report describes clinical and parasitological findings in an adopted stray cat imported from Thailand. The cat was presented to a veterinary clinic for veterinary care 5 d after arrival in Canada. The cat was dewormed and passed a large mass of tapeworms on the following day. Fecal and blood samples were submitted to Diagnostic Services at the Atlantic Veterinary College (Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island). Eggs ofspp. andspp., oocysts ofspp., and a metastrongyloid 1st-stage nematode larva (L) were seen on microscopic examination of fecal flotation. Additional Lrecovered using the Baermann technique were molecularly characterized using small subunit rRNA-PCR, and DNA sequencing identified the larvae asThe cat was treated with a 2-day course of milbemycin oxime (10.7 mg/kg) and praziquantel (26.8 mg/kg), followed 5 d later by a 5-day course of fenbendazole (50 mg/kg). Posttreatment fecal examinations showed no evidence of parasitic infection. The cat resumed sheddingspp. eggs 40 d later and was given a second 2-day course of milbemycin oxime and praziquantel. Fecal examinations conducted at 7 and 35 d after treatment did not reveal any parasitic eggs or cysts. The occurrences ofandspp. are reported and diagnosed for the first time in Canada. The risk of foreign pathogen spread into a new geographical region was minimized by timely diagnoses, appropriate veterinary care, and the cooperation of conscientious ownersbiocontainment by isolation of the cat and proper feces disposal. Key clinical message: Knowing the clinical and travel history of an animal is critical for making an accurate diagnosis. Molecular confirmatory testing is valuable when diagnosing parasitic infections with similar morphologies.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41847483/