Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How ticks cause Ehrlichia infection in dogs and how to detect it
By Starkey, Lindsay A et al.·Published in Veterinary microbiology·2014·Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Development of antibodies to and PCR detection of Ehrlichia spp. in dogs following natural tick exposure.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Ten dogs in the southern US that were exposed to ticks were tested for infections caused by Ehrlichia, a type of bacteria spread by ticks. All the dogs showed evidence of infection, particularly with Ehrlichia ewingii and Ehrlichia chaffeensis, but none developed any noticeable symptoms of illness. The infections were detected through various tests, including blood samples and specialized PCR tests. Fortunately, the dogs did not show any signs of clinical disease, indicating that while they were infected, they remained healthy.
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Abstract
Dogs exposed to ticks in the southern US may become infected with multiple species of Ehrlichia. To better define infection risk, blood samples collected from 10 dogs infested with ticks via a natural infestation model were evaluated by blood smear examination, PCR, patient-side ELISAs (SNAP® 4Dx® and SNAP® 4Dx® Plus), IFA, and peptide based ELISA for evidence of infection with Ehrlichia canis, E. chaffeensis, and/or E. ewingii. Although morulae were rarely identified in blood smears, every dog (10/10) became infected with Ehrlichia spp. as evidenced by nested PCR detection of E. chaffeensis (7/10) and E. ewingii DNA (10/10); real-time PCR detection of E. chaffeensis (0/10) and E. ewingii (9/10); seroconversion on two different patient-side ELISAs (4/10 or 10/10); seroconversion on IFA to E. canis (10/10, maximum inverse titer=128-4096, GMTMAX=548.7) and E. chaffeensis (10/10, maximum inverse titer=1024-32,768, GMTMAX=4096); and seroconversion on peptide specific ELISA to E. chaffeensis VLPT (7/10) and E. ewingii p28 (9/10). Rickettsemia with E. chaffeensis and E. ewingii, as determined by nested PCR, persisted in dogs for an average of 3.2 or 30.5 days, respectively. Ehrlichia canis was not detected in any dog by any method, and no dogs developed signs of clinical disease. Our data suggest that in areas where ticks are common, dogs are at high risk of infection with Ehrlichia spp., particularly E. ewingii and E. chaffeensis, and can serve as a sentinel for monitoring for the presence of these zoonotic pathogens.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25213230/