Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Test to detect parasite antigen in dog and cat poop
By Elsemore, David et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2023·Idexx Laboratories, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Immunoassay for detection ofcoproantigen in dogs and cats.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs and cats were tested for parasitic infections that are often missed due to difficulty in identifying the parasites in their feces. Researchers developed a new test that can detect specific proteins (coproantigens) from these parasites in the animals' stool samples. In a study with infected dogs, the new test showed high accuracy, identifying infections that traditional methods often overlooked. After treatment with praziquantel, a common dewormer, the dogs quickly stopped shedding the parasite proteins, indicating the treatment was effective. This new test could help veterinarians diagnose infections more reliably.
People also search for: dog parasite test · cat fecal test for worms · praziquantel for dog tapeworms
Abstract
infections in dogs and cats are underestimated because of a lack of proglottid observations and poor recovery of parasite elements by centrifugal flotation. We developed an immunoassay that employs a pair of monoclonal antibodies to capturespecific coproantigen in fecal extracts from dogs and cats. Real-time PCR forDNA in perianal swabs and observation of proglottids were used as reference methods. In 6 experimentally infected dogs, parasite DNA, coproantigen, and proglottid segments were first detected at 22, 23, and 26 d post-infection, respectively. Praziquantel treatment of 3 experimentally infected dogs resulted in the elimination of both coproantigen and proglottid shedding within 1-5 d post-treatment; however, parasite DNA persisted for 14 d. Immunohistochemistry on immature and mature tapeworm segments using an antibody against the coproantigen supports the premise that the antigen is produced in mature segments. We assessed the performance of our coproantigen test in natural infections in 78 dogs from a flea-endemic area. Of the 12 antigen-positive samples, 11 were confirmed with a positive PCR test and/or proglottid observation. Finally, we evaluated a convenience sample set of 730 canine and 163 feline fecal samples obtained from a commercial diagnostic laboratory;antigen was detected in 4.1% of the canine and 12.9% of the feline samples, whereas parasite elements were observed in only 0.028% of samples. Our coproantigen immunoassay provides a sensitive method for the detection ofinfection in dogs and cats.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37491878/