Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Babesia and Theileria parasites found in symptomatic and healthy dogs
By Beck, Relja et al.·Published in International journal for parasitology·2009·Faculty of Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Diversity of Babesia and Theileria species in symptomatic and asymptomatic dogs in Croatia.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study found that 81 dogs showing symptoms of illness were infected with tick-borne parasites called Babesia, with the most common type being Babesia canis canis. In addition, blood samples from 848 healthy dogs revealed that some were also carrying Babesia without showing any signs of sickness. This suggests that dogs can be infected with these parasites without displaying symptoms, which raises questions about how these infections relate to health issues in dogs. Further research is needed to understand the connection between these parasites and the symptoms they may cause.
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Abstract
Babesiosis, the disease caused by tick-borne hematozoan parasites of the genus Babesia, is particularly common in dogs, and is caused by several "large" species of Babesia, as well as by an increasing number of "small" species of Babesia, some of which appear to be more closely related to members of the genus Theileria. In this work, blood samples were collected from 848 randomly selected, asymptomatic dogs and from 81 symptomatic dogs, microscopically positive for Babesia, and characterised by PCR and sequence analysis of a fragment of the ssrRNA gene. A prevalence of 3.42% (29 of 848) was found in asymptomatic dogs and sequence analysis revealed the presence of Babesia canis canis in 20 dogs (69%), Babesia gibsoni in six dogs (21%), Babesia canis vogeli in two dogs (7%) and Theileria annae in one dog (3%). In the group of symptomatic dogs, which were all positive by PCR, B. canis canis was the predominant species (78 dogs, or 96%), followed by single infections with B. canis vogeli, Babesia caballi and Theileria equi. Our study has confirmed that dogs are infected with a wide range of both large and small piroplasm species and subspecies, including B. caballi and T. equi, two parasites usually found in horses. The detection of the pathogenic species B. canis canis and B. gibsoni in asymptomatic dogs indicates that the relationship between parasite species/subspecies and clinical signs of infection in dogs deserves further investigation. Finally, the identities of the tick vectors transmitting T. annae and B. caballi remain to be elucidated.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19367832/