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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Wolbachia bacteria's role in cat heartworm lung disease breathing

By García-Guasch, L et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2013·Hospital Veterinari Molins, Spain·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Is Wolbachia participating in the bronchial reactivity of cats with heartworm associated respiratory disease?

Species:
cat
Feline asthmaBreathing & coughCats

Plain-English summary

A group of cats with heartworm disease showed increased breathing problems due to the presence of a bacteria called Wolbachia that lives inside the heartworm. Researchers used a special test to measure how these cats breathed and found that those with Wolbachia had worse bronchial reactions, meaning their airways were more reactive and inflamed. This suggests that Wolbachia may worsen the respiratory issues caused by heartworms in cats. Understanding this relationship could help veterinarians better manage heartworm-associated respiratory disease in affected cats.

People also search for: cat heartworm symptoms · cat breathing problems treatment · Wolbachia in cats heartworm

Abstract

Heartworm associated respiratory disease is a pulmonary syndrome in cats that results from the vascular and parenchymal inflammatory response associated with the arrival and death of Dirofilaria immitis worms into the distal pulmonary arteries. This parasite harbors intracellular Wolbachia, an endosymbiont bacteria. The association between the parasite and the bacteria is obligatory. Some studies suggest the involvement of Wolbachia in the development of the inflammatory reaction and in the polarization of the host immune response against the parasite. Barometric whole-body plethysmography is a non-invasive pulmonary function test that allows a dynamic study of breathing patterns and is useful to study airway disease and the response to different treatments. The aim of this prospective non-blinded study was to compare the influence of Wolbachia upon the respiratory function variables in a population of cats seropositive to D. immitis by use of Barometric whole-body plethysmography. Fourteen seropositive cats to Wolbachia and eight seronegative cats were put into the plethysmograph chamber and different respiratory variables were measured. The results were analyzed and compared between the two groups of animals. Significant differences were found for bronchoconstriction index variables PAU (pause) (P-value<0.05) and Penh (enhanced pause) (P-value<0.05). The results obtained in our study suggest that Wolbachia seems to produce a greater acute inflammatory response at bronchial, vascular and parenchymal level worsening the state of broncho-reactivity associated with the presence of seropositivity to D. immitis in cats.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23433646/