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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dogs do not develop resistance to repeated brown dog tick bites

By Évora, Patricia Martinez et al.·Published in Experimental & applied acarology·2015·Department of Veterinary Pathology, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Lack of acquired resistance in dogs to successive infestations of Rhipicephalus sanguineus ticks from Brazil and Argentina.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 6-month-old Dachshund puppies were tested to see if they could develop resistance to brown dog ticks after being infested multiple times. The puppies were divided into two groups, each exposed to ticks from different locations in Brazil and Argentina. Despite repeated infestations, the puppies did not show any signs of immunity to the ticks, meaning they could still get infested without developing resistance. This study highlights the challenges of tick infestations in dogs and suggests that even after multiple exposures, dogs may remain vulnerable to these pests.

People also search for: why does my dog keep getting ticks · Dachshund tick prevention · how to treat dog tick infestations

Abstract

Comparative studies between brown dog tick Rhipicephalus sanguineus populations from Brazil (Jaboticabal, São Paulo) and Argentina (Rafaela, Santa Fé) showed significant biological, morphological and genetic differences between them. This work aimed to study, in a comparative way, the acquisition of resistance in domestic dogs to R. sanguineus from Jaboticabal and Rafaela, after successive and controlled infestations. Ticks were kept in a BOD incubator under controlled conditions (27 °C, 80 % relative humidity, 12-h photoperiod). Ten dogs, Dachshund breed, males and females, 6 months old, short- or long-haired, without prior contact with ticks, were used as hosts. They were distributed into two experimental groups composed of five animals each: G1 infested with ten adult couples of R. sanguineus (Jaboticabal) per animal, and G2 infested with ten adult couples of R. sanguineus (Rafaela) per animal. Ticks' biological parameters and titration of antibodies from the dogs' sera by ELISA test were used for comparison between the strains. Results of the biological parameters showed that the dogs did not acquire immunity to either of the R. sanguineus strains after repeated infestations. The ELISA test showed low antibody titers in sera of dogs from G2, in successive infestations, and higher antibody responses post second and third infestations in G1. It also demonstrated cross-reactivity between sera of dogs infested with R. sanguineus (Jaboticabal) and antigens from R. sanguineus (Rafaela) and vice versa. We conclude that Dachshund dogs did not develop resistance against neither Jaboticabal nor Rafaela strains of R. sanguineus.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26063405/