Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Parabodo caudatus protozoa found in dog urine after blood in urine
By Vandersea, Mark W et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2015·Litaker)Department of Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Identification of Parabodo caudatus (class Kinetoplastea) in urine voided from a dog with hematuria.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 13-year-old male dog was found to have blood in his urine (hematuria) and, five days later, a urine sample showed the presence of a type of protozoa called Parabodo caudatus. This was unusual for the dog, as he had undergone many urine tests over the years without any signs of these organisms. The protozoa were confirmed through a special genetic test, but they were not found in the dog's environment. After the initial detection, further urine tests over the next two and a half years showed no recurrence of the protozoa. The dog did not seem to have any ongoing health issues related to this finding.
People also search for: dog blood in urine · Parabodo caudatus in dogs · hematuria in older dogs · dog urine test results · protozoa in dog urine
Abstract
A voided urine sample, obtained from a 13-year-old intact male dog residing in a laboratory animal research facility, was observed to contain biflagellate protozoa 5 days following an episode of gross hematuria. The protozoa were identified as belonging to the class Kinetoplastea on the basis of light microscopic observation of Wright-Giemsa-stained urine sediment in which the kinetoplast was observed basal to 2 anterior flagella. A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay using primers corresponding with conserved regions within the 18S ribosomal RNA gene of representative kinetoplastid species identified nucleotide sequences with 100% identity to Parabodo caudatus. Parabodo caudatus organisms were unable to be demonstrated cytologically or by means of PCR in samples collected from the dog's environment. The dog had a history of 50 complete urinalyses performed over the 12-year period preceding detection of P. caudatus, and none of these were noted to contain protozoa. Moreover, the gross hematuria that was documented 5 days prior to detection of P. caudatus had never before been observed in this dog. Over the ensuing 2.5 years of the dog's life, 16 additional complete urinalyses were performed, none of which revealed the presence of protozoa. Bodonids are commonly found in soil as well as in freshwater and marine environments. However, P. caudatus, in particular, has a 150-year-long, interesting, and largely unresolved history in people as either an inhabitant or contaminant of urine. This historical conundrum is revisited in the current description of P. caudatus as recovered from the urine of a dog.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25525146/