Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with Hepatozoon infection causing bone and brain inflammation
By Marchetti, Veronica et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2009·Department of Veterinary Clinic, Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Hepatozoonosis in a dog with skeletal involvement and meningoencephalomyelitis.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 15-month-old female mongrel dog was brought to the vet after losing weight, not eating, and showing weakness in all four legs for six weeks. The vet found signs of severe anemia and a parasitic infection called Hepatozoon canis, which was affecting her muscles and causing bone issues. After starting treatment with imidocarb dipropionate and prednisone, the dog showed significant improvement and was nearly back to normal after 60 days, with no signs of the parasite left in her blood.
People also search for: dog weight loss and weakness · Hepatozoon canis treatment · dog not eating and lethargic · dog bone infection symptoms
Abstract
A 15-month-old, female mongrel dog was presented with a 6-week history of inappetence, weight loss, and tetraparesis. Physical examination revealed weakness, poor body condition, mild fever, pale mucous membranes, and diffuse muscle atrophy. The right hind limb was painful and edematous, with large ecchymoses. The femur was irregular on palpation and moderate popliteal lymphadenopathy was evident. Results of a CBC showed severe anemia with mild regeneration, an inflammatory leukogram with 90% of neutrophils parasitized by Hepatozoon sp. gamonts, and moderate thrombocytopenia. A bone marrow aspirate had myeloid hyperplasia and contained a few extracellular Hepatozoon meronts and a few intracellular gamonts within neutrophils. Serum chemistry abnormalities included hypoalbuminemia, hyperglobulinemia, hypoglycemia, hypercalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, and elevated alkaline phosphatase activity. Radiologic findings of the right femur included periosteal bone proliferation and lesions compatible with osteomyelitis. A fine needle aspirate specimen from the bone lesion had neutrophilic inflammation; 36% of the neutrophils contained Hepatozoon gamonts. Results of cerebrospinal fluid analysis included a protein concentration of 37 mg/dL and marked mononuclear pleocytosis (243 cell/microL) with a predominance of lymphocytes. An ELISA was positive for Hepatozoon canis and PCR results with DNA sequencing confirmed infection with this organism. A diagnosis of hepatozoonosis with skeletal involvement and meningoencephalomyelitis was made. The dog recovered almost completely neurologically and had no gamonts in the blood after 60 days of therapy with imidocarb dipropionate and prednisone. This is an unusual case of canine hepatozoonosis involving neurologic signs and a periosteal reaction more typical of H. americanum infection and rarely reported in dogs infected with H. canis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19228365/