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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Acute infection signs and treatment of Rangelia vitalii in young dogs

By Da Silva, Aleksandro S et al.·Published in Experimental parasitology·2011·Department of Microbiology and Parasitology, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Experimental infection with Rangelia vitalii in dogs: acute phase, parasitemia, biological cycle, clinical-pathological aspects and treatment.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of young female dogs in Brazil were infected with a parasite called Rangelia vitalii, which caused symptoms like lethargy, fever, and loss of appetite. Blood tests showed that the parasite was present in their blood, peaking around 9 to 11 days after infection, leading to moderate anemia and other health issues. After 21 days, the dogs were treated with a medication called diminazene aceturate, which successfully cleared the parasite from their systems, and all treated dogs recovered fully.

People also search for: dog lethargy fever treatment · Rangelia vitalii infection in dogs · diminazene aceturate for dogs

Abstract

Recently we conducted the molecular characterization of Rangelia vitalii, a protozoan with high pathogenicity for young dogs in southern Brazil. To date, the descriptions of the disease have been restricted to natural infection cases. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the parasitemia, biological cycles and clinical-pathological findings in dogs experimentally infected with R. vitalii in the acute phase of disease, and also aimed to test a therapeutic protocol based on the diminazene aceturate. For this study, we used 12 young dogs (females), separated into two groups. Group A was composed of healthy dogs, not-infected (n=5), and Group B consisted of animals infected with R. vitalii (n=7). After infection, the animals were monitored by blood smear examinations, which showed intra-erythrocytic forms of the parasite 5 days post-infection (PI). Parasitemia increased progressively in these animals and had the highest peak of circulating parasites between 9 and 11 days PI. Subsequently, the parasitemia reduced and the protozoan was seen inside the leukocytes in days 17, 19 and 21 PI. The most prominent clinical signs observed at the 20 day PI of experiment were lethargy, fever and anorexia. We observed a decrease of hematocrit of infected animals compared with not-infected dogs, featuring a moderate anemia. Pathological evaluation of one dog in Group B at day 21 PI revealed splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, lymphadenopathy, and hemorrhages at necropsy. Histological examination showed only follicular hyperplasia in the spleen and lymph nodes, and the etiologic agent in the vascular endothelium. At 21 days PI, it was performed the treatment of dogs in Group B (n=6) with a single dose of diminazene aceturate, which showed a curative efficacy of 100% in cleaning R. vitalii from blood of infected dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21570966/