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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

PCR test to identify six types of dog microfilariae

By Rishniw, Mark et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2006·Department of Biomedical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Discrimination between six species of canine microfilariae by a single polymerase chain reaction.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A dog imported from Europe tested negative for heartworm but had microfilariae (tiny worms) in its blood. Researchers developed a new test to identify the specific type of microfilariae and found that this dog was infected with Dirofilaria repens, marking the first case of this infection in the United States. They also tested five other dogs with similar symptoms and found that their initial diagnoses were incorrect; some were misidentified as Acanthocheilonema reconditum when they were actually Dirofilaria immitis. This new testing method could help veterinarians accurately identify various types of filariae in dogs.

People also search for: dog heartworm test negative · dog microfilariae treatment · Dirofilaria repens symptoms in dogs

Abstract

Canine dirofilariasis caused by Dirofilaria immitis is usually diagnosed by specific antigen testing and/or identification of microfilariae. However, D. immitis and at least six other filariae can produce canine microfilaremias with negative heartworm antigen tests. Discriminating these can be of clinical importance. To resolve discordant diagnoses by two diagnostic laboratories in an antigen-negative, microfilaremic dog recently imported into the US from Europe we developed a simple molecular method of identifying different microfilariae, and subsequently validated our method against six different filariae known to infect dogs by amplifying ribosomal DNA spacer sequences by polymerase chain reaction using common and species-specific primers, and sequencing the products to confirm the genotype of the filariae. We identified the filaria in this dog as D. repens. This is the first case of D. repens infection in the United States. Additionally, we examined microfilariae from five additional antigen-negative, microfilaremic dogs and successfully identified the infecting parasite in each case. Our diagnoses differed from the initial morphological diagnosis in three of these cases, demonstrating the inaccuracy of morphological diagnosis. In each case, microfilariae identified morphologically as A. reconditum were identified as D. immitis by molecular methods. Finally, we demonstrated that our PCR method should amplify DNA from at least two additional filariae (Onchocerca and Mansonella), suggesting that this method may be suitable for genotyping all members of the family Onchocercidae.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16289566/