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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Factors linked to Giardia infection in dogs by different tests

By Uiterwijk, Mathilde et al.·Published in Parasites & vectors·2019·Department of Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Netherlands·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Host factors associated with Giardia duodenalis infection in dogs across multiple diagnostic tests.

Species:
dog
Canine giardiasisStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A study found that young dogs and those living in groups, like hunting dogs, were more likely to be infected with Giardia, a common intestinal parasite. The research showed that while loose stools didn't generally indicate Giardia infection, household dogs with loose stools were more likely to test positive. Additionally, Giardia-positive dogs with loose stools shed more cysts, which are the infectious form of the parasite. If these dogs also had other intestinal parasites, fewer cysts were detected under the microscope. Overall, young and group-housed dogs were at a higher risk for Giardia infection, which can lead to gastrointestinal issues.

People also search for: dog Giardia infection symptoms · why is my dog having loose stools · treatment for Giardia in dogs · young dog intestinal parasites · hunting dog health issues

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to assess potential associations between Giardia duodenalis infection in dogs, as determined by three diagnostic tests, and dog's group of origin, fecal consistency, age, sex, neuter status, and co-infections with other gastrointestinal parasites. METHODS: Fecal samples from 1291 dogs from four groups (household, shelter, hunting and clinical dogs) were tested with qPCR, rapid enzyme immunochromatographic assay (IDEXX SNAPGiardia), and direct immunofluorescence (DFA, Merifluor) for presence of G. duodenalis. Moreover, fecal samples were tested with centrifugation sedimentation flotation (CSF) coproscopical analysis for presence of gastrointestinal parasites. Associations were expressed as odds ratios (ORs). RESULTS: Several significant associations were found, of which a few were consistent for all three tests and Giardia positivity in general (positive with at least one of these tests). Dogs older than one year were significantly less likely to test positive for Giardia than younger dogs. Group-housed dogs, especially hunting dogs, were significantly more likely to test positive for Giardia compared to household and clinical dogs. A consistently significant association with Trichuris appeared to be driven by the high prevalence in hunting dogs. Although there was no significant association between loose stool and Giardia infection in the overall population, household dogs were significantly more likely to test Giardia-positive when having loose stool. Overall, Giardia-positive dogs with loose stool shed significantly more cysts, both determined semi-quantitatively with CSF and quantitatively by qPCR, than positive dogs with no loose stool. When other gastrointestinal parasites were present, significantly fewer cysts were detected with CSF, but this was not confirmed with qPCR. CONCLUSION: Giardia is the most common gastrointestinal parasite in Dutch dogs, except for hunting dogs, in which Trichuris and strongyle-type eggs (hookworms) prevailed. Giardia infection was not significantly associated with loose stool, except for household dogs. Young dogs and group-housed dogs were significantly more often Giardia-positive. These associations were consistent across diagnostic tests. Young dogs, clinical dogs and dogs with loose stool shed Giardia cysts in the highest numbers. If another gastrointestinal parasite was present lower numbers of cysts were observed by microscope (CSF), but not with a molecular method (qPCR).

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31752993/