Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog in Italy with anemia and vomiting diagnosed with Babesia gibsoni
By Trotta, M et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2009·Laboratorio d'Analisi Veterinarie San Marco, Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Clinicopathological findings, molecular detection and characterization of Babesia gibsoni infection in a sick dog from Italy.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 4-year-old female American Pit Bull Terrier in Italy was brought to the vet for symptoms like not eating, being very tired, weakness, and throwing up occasionally. The dog was dehydrated and had pale gums, along with abdominal pain and an enlarged spleen. After surgery to remove the spleen, her condition worsened, and tests showed severe anemia and other blood issues. Further examination revealed she was infected with Babesia gibsoni, a type of blood parasite. This case highlights the importance of recognizing and treating such infections in dogs.
People also search for: dog vomiting and weakness · American Pit Bull Terrier anemia treatment · Babesia gibsoni in dogs
Abstract
A 4-year-old intact female American Pit Bull Terrier from Italy descendant of an American-born bitch was evaluated for anorexia, lethargy, weakness, and intermittent vomiting. On physical examination, the dog was dehydrated, had pale mucous membranes, hunched posture and abdominal pain. A moderate anemia was observed. Splenomegaly and hyperechoic regions suspected as infarcts in the spleen were seen on abdominal ultrasound. Based on the suspicion of splenic torsion, splenectomy was performed. After surgery, the clinical condition deteriorated. A follow-up complete blood count demonstrated severe macrocytic normochromic anemia with evidence of marked regeneration, left shift neutrophilia, monocytosis and marked thrombocytopenia. Blood smear evaluation revealed single to multiple, variable sized (1-3 microm in diameter), and round to oval to band-like piroplasms within many red blood cells consistent with small form Babesia spp. or Theileria spp. A partial segment of the 18S rRNA gene was amplified and the PCR product was analyzed by direct sequencing. The nucleotide sequence was completely identical to that of Babesia gibsoni present in GenBank. This is the first molecular detection and characterization of B. gibsoni infection in a sick dog from Italy.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19679397/