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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Blood and immune changes in dogs with Dirofilaria and Babesia

By Wężyk, Dagmara et al.·Published in Scientific reports·2023·Department of Eco-Epidemiology of Parasitic Diseases·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Haematological indices and immune response profiles in dogs naturally infected and co-infected with Dirofilaria repens and Babesia canis.

Species:
dog
Canine babesiosisStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs in Poland was studied to understand the effects of being infected with two parasites, Dirofilaria repens and Babesia canis. Some dogs were healthy, while others had either one or both infections. Dogs with Babesia canis experienced anemia and issues with their kidneys and liver, but those co-infected with both parasites showed milder symptoms. The study found that the immune response varied between the infections, with different genes being activated depending on the severity of the Babesia infection. Overall, the dogs with co-infections had less severe health impacts compared to those with only Babesia canis.

People also search for: dog anemia symptoms · Babesia canis treatment · Dirofilaria repens in dogs · dog kidney liver problems · co-infection in dogs

Abstract

Co-infections with Dirofilaria repens and Babesia canis are rarely reported in the literature and there is very limited knowledge of their impact on canine health. Central Poland is endemic for both parasites, posing a risk of co-infections in dogs. To evaluate the impact of co-infection with B. canis and D. repens on canine health, four groups of dogs were examined: healthy dogs, dogs infected with B. canis, dogs infected with D. repens and dogs co-infected with both species. Blood parameters indicative of anaemia, kidney and liver damage were analysed statistically. Additionally, expression levels of immune response genes were quantified and compared, to define the type of immune response typically encountered in single- and co-infections. In dogs infected with D. repens, no major alterations in blood parameters were observed. Dogs infected with B. canis suffered from anaemia, kidney and liver insufficiency. In contrast, dogs co-infected with D. repens and B. canis showed milder alternation in blood biochemical parameters associated with liver (ALP activity) and kidney (serum urea and creatinine levels) dysfunction, compared to dogs infected only with B. canis. The expression of genes associated with cellular (Th1-mediated) (STAT4 and INF-γ), humoral (Th2-mediated) (STAT6, GATA3, SOCS3, IL-13) and regulatory (IL-10) responses was quantified. For this analysis, dogs infected with B. canis were divided into two groups-'Babesia 1' (mild babesiosis), 'Babesia 2' (severe babesiosis). All the tested factors, except INF-γ, were found to be expressed in dogs infected with D. repens. In 'Babesia 1' dogs, expression of GATA3 was highest, while in 'Babesia 2'-INF-γ and SOCS3 dominated. IL-13 expression was predominant in dogs infected with D. repens, and STAT6 and IL-10 predominated in dogs with co-infections.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36739305/