Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
DEA blood types and anti-DEA7 antibodies in Italian Corso dogs
By Spada, E et al.·Published in Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)·2017·Department of Veterinary Medicine (DIMEVET), Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Dog erythrocyte antigens (DEA) 1, 4, 7 and suspected naturally occurring anti-DEA 7 antibodies in Italian Corso dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study found that many Italian Corso dogs have specific blood types that can affect blood transfusions. In a group of 100 Corso dogs, 71% were negative for DEA 1, while all tested positive for DEA 4, and 95% were negative for DEA 7. About 32% of these dogs had suspected antibodies against DEA 7, which could lead to complications if they receive mismatched blood. The research suggests that while Corso dogs can be good blood donors, their unique blood type characteristics may increase the risk of transfusion reactions if they need blood themselves.
People also search for: Corso dog blood type · dog blood transfusion risks · DEA 1 sensitization in dogs
Abstract
We sought to determine the prevalence of dog erythrocyte antigen (DEA) 1, 4 and 7 and naturally occurring anti-DEA7 antibodies in Italian Corso dogs. In addition, we correlated DEAs with different epidemiologic variables, compared the prevalence of DEAs against other canine populations and assessed the risk of sensitisation and transfusion reactions (TRs) following unmatched transfusion. Blood samples from 100 Corso dogs were evaluated for DEA 1, 4, 7 and naturally occurring anti-DEA 7 antibodies. Seventy-one percent of samples were DEA 1-negative, 100% tested DEA 4-positive, and 95% tested DEA 7-negative. Suspected anti-DEA7 antibodies were found in 32% dogs. The DEA 1 and 7-negative phenotypes were significantly more common than in most canine populations. When a previously tested Italian canine population was considered as blood donors for Corso dogs, the risk of DEA 1 sensitisation using DEA 1 untyped blood was 29%, and of acute haemolytic TRs after a second untyped DEA 1-incompatible transfusion was 8%. The potential for delayed TRs between DEA 7-negative Corso dogs with suspected naturally occurring anti-DEA 7 antibodies receiving untyped DEA 7-positive blood was 11%. Conversely, when Corso dogs were blood donors for the same population, the risk of DEA 1 sensitisation was 17% and the risk of an acute haemolytic TR after a second DEA 1-incompatible blood transfusion was 3%. Corso dogs can be suitable blood donors. Additional studies are needed to clarify whether the high prevalence of naturally occurring anti-DEA 7 antibodies in this breed could increase their risk of delayed TRs when they are blood recipients.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28410671/