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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How common is leptospirosis exposure in unvaccinated dogs across

By Carithers, Doug et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2024·Boehringer Ingelheim, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Field assessment of potential exposure of dogs to leptospirosis by measuring antibody titers in dogs: a multisite study in five geographic regions of the United States.

Species:
dog
Canine leptospirosisBehaviour & energyDogs

Plain-English summary

A study found that 11.6% of unvaccinated dogs tested positive for leptospirosis exposure across various regions in the United States. Leptospirosis is a bacterial infection that can be serious and even spread to humans. The researchers collected blood samples from over 1,300 dogs and discovered that many had antibodies indicating potential exposure to the bacteria. This suggests that veterinarians might want to consider more frequent vaccinations against leptospirosis, especially in areas where the risk is higher.

People also search for: dog leptospirosis symptoms · unvaccinated dog exposure to leptospirosis · leptospirosis vaccine for dogs · signs of leptospirosis in dogs

Abstract

Leptospirosis vaccine for dogs in the United States is considered a lifestyle or non-core vaccine, making individual veterinary practitioners responsible for determining if vaccination is necessary for their patients. Veterinary professionals often base their vaccination decisions on local rates of clinical cases. However, even subclinical leptospirosis infections have zoonotic potential. The microscopic agglutination test (MAT) is effective for screening unvaccinated animals, but previous vaccination can lead to inconsistent results and variable MAT titers over time. This prospective research survey evaluated if local experience was sufficient to justify selective vaccination for leptospirosis. MAT analyses were performed on sera collected from well-cared-for, unvaccinated dogs residing in five different geographies across the United States: South-Central (East Texas), New England, the Mid-Atlantic (North Carolina and Virginia), Midwest (Wisconsin/northern Illinois), and Southwest (southern California). Thirty-eight clinics participated, submitting a total of 1345 qualified samples from unvaccinated dogs over 1 year of age. 11.6% of these unvaccinated dogs had MAT titers for one or more serogroups of. While seropositivity does not necessarily indicate that disease will result or that a specific serovar is involved, these MAT-positive cases do indicate that the potential for exposure exists and clinical signs or a carrier-state could result from infection. These survey results would indicate that a more aggressive vaccination protocol for leptospirosis should be considered.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39104545/