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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Immune changes over 6 years in US dogs born with leishmaniosis

By Vida, Blake et al.·Published in Veterinary immunology and immunopathology·2016·Department of Veterinary Pathology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Immunologic progression of canine leishmaniosis following vertical transmission in United States dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Three puppies born to a mother dog infected with the Leishmania parasite were studied to see how they developed over time. Despite being siblings and living in the same environment, each puppy showed different responses to the infection. One puppy developed mild symptoms but had positive test results for the parasite, another remained healthy but had a strong immune response, and the third showed little reaction to the infection and stayed healthy. This study highlights how dogs can react differently to the same infection, which can be important for understanding and treating canine leishmaniosis.

People also search for: dog leishmaniosis symptoms · puppy with Leishmania infection · treatment for dog with leishmaniosis

Abstract

Canine leishmaniosis (CanL) is caused by Leishmania infantum, an obligate intracellular protozoan parasite, endemic in U.S. hunting dog populations. CanL has been found in dogs in 28 states and two Canadian provinces. Previous studies by our group, (Boggiatto et al., 2011), demonstrated that vertical transmission of Leishmania was the predominant means of transmission within U.S. dogs. Very little is known regarding how this alternative means of transmission, alters the long-term immunity and clinical presentation of leishmaniosis in dogs born to a positive bitch. This study follows the immunological progression of CanL in three pups after birth to an infected bitch. During the course of the study, these dogs were tested every six months over the course of six years. Both immunologic (IFN-γ, T cell proliferation, antibody production) and parasitological parameters (qPCR) of vertically-infected dogs were measured. Within the six years after birth to an L. infantum-infected, oligosymptomatic bitch, all dogs had at least one L. infantum PCR-positive test. Interestingly, despite living in the same location for their entire lives and being full siblings, these pups demonstrate three different disease progression patterns of L. infantum infection. One dog progressed to oligosymptomatic disease, maintaining a positive titer and had intermittent positive PCR results. One asymptomatic dog had positive serological titers and demonstrated a robust CD4(+) immune response to infection. The third dog had a negligible response to L. infantum antigen and was healthy. This work demonstrates the biologic variability associated with vertically-transmitted infection similar to the variety of presentations observed during vector-borne leishmaniosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26827836/