Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Limb weakness in Beagle pups from Neospora infection and clindamycin
By Dubey, J P et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2007·Animal and Natural Resources Institute, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Neosporosis in Beagle dogs: clinical signs, diagnosis, treatment, isolation and genetic characterization of Neospora caninum.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A litter of five Beagle puppies in Virginia showed signs of limb weakness starting at just 4 weeks old, which led to a diagnosis of neosporosis, an infection caused by the parasite Neospora caninum. The puppies were treated with Clindamycin, an antibiotic, beginning at 9 weeks of age, and the dosage was increased at 13 weeks. While the treatment helped improve the condition of three of the puppies over six months, it did not completely eliminate the infection, as antibodies remained detectable even at 23 months. Unfortunately, the puppy with the most severe symptoms and its mother were euthanized for research purposes.
People also search for: Beagle puppy limb weakness · neosporosis treatment in dogs · Clindamycin for dog infections
Abstract
Clinical neosporosis was diagnosed in a litter of five pups born to a Beagle bitch from Virginia, USA. Four of the pups developed limb weakness starting at 4 weeks of age. The dogs were suspected to have neosporosis based on clinical signs and empirically treated with Clindamycin (75 mg, oral, twice daily, total 150 mg) starting at 9 weeks of age and the dosage was doubled at 13 weeks of age. Antibodies to Neospora caninum were detected in sera of the dam and pups when first tested serologically at the age of 4 months. The owner donated the pup with the worst clinical signs and the dam for research; both dogs were euthanized. Viable N. caninum was isolated in gamma interferon gene knock out (KO) mice and in cell culture from the pup killed at 137 days of age. Tissue cysts, but no tachyzoites, were found in histological sections of brain and muscles. The isolate was also identified as N. caninum by PCR and sequence analysis and designated NC-9. N. caninum was neither isolated by bioassay in KO mice nor found in histological sections of tissues of the bitch. Clinical signs in the remaining three pups improved considerably after a 6-month treatment with Clindamycin; N. caninum antibody titers were still persistent in these pups at 23 months of age. Results indicate that medication with Clindamycin can improve clinical condition but not eliminate N. caninum infection.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17890012/