Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Prevention and treatment options for canine leishmaniasis
By Reguera, Rosa M et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2016·Departamento de Ciencias Biomé, Spain·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Current status on prevention and treatment of canine leishmaniasis.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A dog with leishmaniasis, a serious disease caused by a parasite transmitted by sand flies, can show symptoms like weight loss, skin lesions, and lethargy. Treatment often involves using medications like antimonials, which can help reduce symptoms but may not completely eliminate the parasite, leading to relapses. Newer treatments, such as miltefosine and combinations with other drugs, are being explored to improve outcomes. Preventive measures, including special collars and vaccines, are also being developed to protect dogs from this disease.
People also search for: dog leishmaniasis symptoms · treatment for leishmaniasis in dogs · preventing leishmaniasis in dogs
Abstract
Canine leishmaniasis (CanL) is a parasite-borne disease mainly induced by Leishmania infantum in the Old World and Leishmania chagasi (infantum) in the New World. CanL is a zoonosis transmitted by the bite of infected Phlebotominae flies that act as vectors. CanL is a very serious disease that usually produces death when remains untreated and can be a focus of transmission to other dogs or humans. Infected dogs and other domestic and wild animals act as reservoirs and are a real threat to uninfected/healthy dogs and humans in endemic areas where the sand flies are present. Prevention of new infections in dogs can help to stop the current increase of the disease in humans, reinforcing the concept of "One Health" approach. The management of CanL is being performed using prophylactic measures in healthy dogs - insecticides impregnated in collars or immunostimulants applied by spot-on devices - and chemotherapy in animals that suffer from the disease. Antimonials as first-line monotherapy have proven efficacy in reducing most of the clinical signs of CanL, but they need to be administered during several days, and no complete parasite clearance is achieved, favouring the presence of relapses among treated dogs. Therefore, new drugs, such as miltefosine, or combinations of this drug or antimonials with allopurinol are in the pipeline of clinical treatment of CanL. Recently, there has been an emergence of protective - prophylactic - and curative - autogenous vaccines - immunotherapy tools to face CanL, whose results are still under study. This review highlights the current use of preventive and eradicative weapons to fight against this disease, which is a scourge for dogs and a continuous threat to human beings.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27523945/