Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Heat treatment helps detect heartworm antigen in dog blood samples
By Velasquez, Luisa et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2014·Department of Pathobiology, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Increased prevalence of Dirofilaria immitis antigen in canine samples after heat treatment.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study found that some dogs' blood samples may hide the presence of heartworm (Dirofilaria immitis) infection, making it hard for vets to diagnose. Researchers tested blood samples from dogs in shelters and discovered that after heating the samples, some that were initially negative turned positive for heartworm. This suggests that heating the samples could help improve the accuracy of heartworm tests. By using heat treatment, vets may get a clearer picture of whether a dog has heartworm, which is crucial for proper treatment.
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Abstract
Canine serum samples may contain factors that prevent detection of antigen of Dirofilaria immitis on commercial assays, precluding accurate diagnosis. To determine the degree to which the presence of blocking antibodies or other inhibitors of antigen detection may interfere with our ability to detect circulating antigen in canine samples, archived plasma and serum samples (n=165) collected from dogs in animal shelters were tested for D. immitis antigen before and after heat treatment. Negative samples were also evaluated for their ability to block detection of D. immitis antigen in a sample from a positive dog. All 165 samples were negative prior to heating, but 11/154 (7.1%) became positive after heat treatment, a conversion that was documented and quantified on spectrophotometric plate assays, and 7/165 (4.2%) samples decreased detection of antigen when mixed with a known positive sample, suggesting some blocking ability was present. An additional 103 plasma and serum samples that tested positive prior to heating also were evaluated; the optical density of 14/101 (13.9%) increased by ≥50%, and one sample by as much as 15-fold, after heat treatment. Our results suggest that canine serum and plasma samples from dogs in the southeastern United States can contain inhibitors of D. immitis antigen detection, and that prevalence estimates of heartworm infection based on these assays would benefit from heat treatment of samples prior to testing.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24785291/