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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Detecting Hepatozoon canis in dogs and ticks in Shaanxi China

By Guo, Wen-Ping et al.·Published in Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases·2020·Department of Pathogenic Biology, China·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Molecular detection of Hepatozoon canis in dogs and ticks in Shaanxi province, China.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of sick dogs in Shaanxi, China, who were initially thought to have babesiosis (a tick-borne disease) but tested negative, were found to have a different tick-borne infection called Hepatozoon canis. Researchers collected blood samples from these dogs and the ticks that infested them, discovering that Hepatozoon canis was present in both. While the study confirmed the presence of this pathogen, it did not establish a clear link between the infection and specific symptoms in the dogs. Further research is needed to understand the clinical implications of this finding.

People also search for: dog tick disease symptoms · Hepatozoon canis in dogs · tick-borne infections in pets

Abstract

Hepatozoon canis, transmitted by Rhipicephalus sanguineus, is a tick-borne pathogen and causes canine hepatozoonosis. Until now, only limited previous studies were conducted on the molecular detection and characterization of Hepatozoon sp. in dogs in China. Blood samples were collected from 93 sick dogs that were clinically diagnosed as babesiosis but tested negative for Babesia, and 103 apparently healthy dogs, as well as their infesting ticks in Xi'an and Hanzhong cities, Shaanxi province of China. PCR amplifying partial 18S rRNA gene was used to detect the DNA of Hepatozoon sp. Genetic and phylogenetic analysis were performed to determine the Hepatozoon species. Our results demonstrated that H. canis was identified from the sick dogs and the infested ticks in Hanzhong, with no significant differences of prevalence between both genders and ages. No positive blood or tick samples were found in Xi'an. Moreover, all the 18S rRNA gene sequences recovered from both dogs and the infested ticks showed a high genetic similarity with each other, and also presented a close relationship with other known sequences in and outside China. In conclusion, H. canis was identified in babesiosis-suspected dogs and ticks infesting them in Shaanxi, China, although the association between clinical signs and H. canis need further study.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32634650/