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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Skin problems and parasite infections in dogs from Midwest Brazil

By Makino, Herica et al.·Published in Revista brasileira de parasitologia veterinaria = Brazilian journal of veterinary parasitology : Orgao Oficial do Colegio Brasileiro de Parasitologia Veterinaria·2020·Programa de P&#xf3·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical-dermatological, histological abnormalities and prevalence of Trypanosoma caninum and Leishmania infantum in dogs from Midwest region of Brazil.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 150 dogs in Brazil was tested for two types of skin infections caused by parasites: Trypanosoma caninum and Leishmania infantum. Only 3 dogs had T. caninum, and they showed no visible skin problems, while 15 dogs had L. infantum and many displayed skin issues. The study found that T. caninum infections did not lead to noticeable symptoms, but L. infantum was linked to significant skin changes. Overall, T. caninum seems to be a rare infection that doesn’t cause skin problems in dogs.

People also search for: dog skin infection symptoms · Leishmania infantum treatment in dogs · Trypanosoma caninum in dogs

Abstract

Leishmania infantum is a trypanosomatid that causes parasitic dermatopathy in dogs. Trypanosoma caninum is another trypanosomatid, which infects the skin of dogs, although cutaneous abnormalities are absent. This study aimed to investigate the occurrence of T. caninum infection and its associated cutaneous and histological changes and compare it with the occurrence of L. infantum infection in dogs. The study included 150 dogs, of which T. caninum infection was identified in 3 (2%) and L. infantum infection in 15 (10%) of them, with no association (p>0.05) of these infections with the breed, gender, age, or cutaneous abnormalities. The cutaneous abnormalities were based on 1 (4.8%) and 12 (57.1%) dogs infected by T. caninum and L. infantum, respectively. The dermatohistopathological abnormalities in the dogs infected with T. caninum included mild perivascular lymphohistioplasmacytic infiltrates in the clinically asymptomatic ones, while in those with dermatological abnormalities, acanthosis, epidermal orthokeratotic hyperkeratosis, melanomacrophages, and co-infection with Microsporum sp. and Trichophyton sp. were observed. InL. infantum infected, the histopathological findings included chronic granulomatous inflammatory infiltrates and structures compatible with amastigotes. Despite the low frequency of T. caninum infection, our findings suggest that this trypanosomatid, unlike L. infantum, does not cause any macroscopic skin abnormalities.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32049143/