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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog sneezing tongue worm parasite after import from Romania

By Veronica Marchetti et al.·Published in Open Veterinary Journal·2023·Department of Veterinary Sciences, University of Pisa, Via Livornese Lato Monte, 56121 San Piero a Grado (Pisa), Italy, LY·View original on DOAJ

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Original publication title: Linguatula serrata (Pentastomida: Linguatulidae) infection in a paucisymptomatic greyhound imported from Romania to Italy: A case report and literature overview

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 1-year-old female Borzoi imported from Romania started sneezing and unexpectedly expelled a worm-like parasite. Tests confirmed it was Linguatula serrata, a type of tongue worm that can infect dogs. To treat the infection, the veterinarian used a combination of medications (febantel, pyrantel, and praziquantel), which successfully cleared the parasites, as no eggs were found in her feces afterward. A follow-up three months later showed she was healthy with no signs of the infection remaining.

People also search for: Borzoi sneezing worm · dog parasite treatment · Linguatula serrata in dogs · imported dog health issues · dog sneezing and worms

Abstract

Background: Linguatula serrata is a pentastomid zoonotic parasite with worldwide distribution. Although some cases of L. serrata infection have been reported in dogs, the epidemiology of this parasite remains largely unknown in developed countries. In recent years, canine linguatulosis has been repeatedly linked to cases of imported infections. This study aims to focus attention on this uncommon parasite through the presentation of a case report and an overview of the literature. Case Description: A 1-year-old intact female Borzoi imported from Romania to Italy sneezed spontaneously a worm-like parasite specimen. Morphological and molecular diagnosis identified the parasite as a female of the zoonotic pentastomid L. serrata (so-called European tongue worm) that lives in the nasopharyngeal tract of canids. Eggs of Linguatula were detected in the faeces. Molecular identification (99-100% homology) was based on DNA extraction, PCR of a 700-bp fragment of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene, and alignment with BLAST analysis. Due to the possibility of other adult or juvenile specimens of the parasite still occurring in the dog, a treatment attempt with a combination of febantel/pyrantel/praziquantel was made. No parasite eggs were detected in fecal samples after the drug was administered. Endoscopy confirmed the absence of adult parasites and slight pathological changes. A follow-up examination conducted three months after the treatment did not reveal any clinical and laboratory abnormalities. Conclusion: L. serrata appears to be currently prevalent in some European countries, but there are no recent extensive studies on the prevalence of canine linguatulosis, so the parasite frequently remains undetected and unreported in dogs as the diagnosis is often overlooked. Parasites not commonly found such as L. serrata can become increasingly prevalent and may be detected in imported dogs. Therefore, veterinarians must be aware of the possible presence of uncommon and exotic pathogens in these dogs, be able to recognize the relevant clinical signs, and diagnose the infection quickly. This will improve the prognosis in individual dogs, reduces the risk of possible public health implications, and reduces the risk of uncommon and exotic pathogens establishing new endemic foci. [Open Vet J 2023; 13(8.000): 1044-1055]

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Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.5455/OVJ.2023.v13.i8.12