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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Intestinal and lung parasites found in dogs in Albania

By Shukullari, Enstela et al.·Published in Parasitology research·2015·Universiteti Bujq&#xeb·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Parasites and vector-borne diseases in client-owned dogs in Albania. Intestinal and pulmonary endoparasite infections.

Species:
dog
Canine giardiasisStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A study found that 40.7% of dogs visiting clinics in Tirana, Albania, tested positive for intestinal parasites, including Giardia, hookworms, and Toxocara. Dogs that were older than one year and had been dewormed at least once a year had a lower chance of infection. Additionally, dogs living with other pets were more likely to have parasites. The findings highlight the importance of regular deworming and monitoring for parasites, especially in younger dogs or those in multi-pet households.

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Abstract

From March 2010 to April 2011 inclusive, feces from 602 client-owned dogs visiting four small animal clinics in Tirana, Albania, were examined using standard coproscopical techniques including Giardia coproantigen ELISA and immunofluorescent staining of Giardia cysts. Overall, samples of 245 dogs (40.7&#xa0;%, 95&#xa0;% CI 36.6-45.6) tested positive for at least one type of fecal endoparasite (protozoan and/or helminth and/or pentastomid) stage, of which 180 (29.9&#xa0;%, 95&#xa0;% CI 26.3-33.7) and 129 (21.9&#xa0;%, 95&#xa0;% CI 18.2-24.9) tested positive for protozoan or nematode endoparasites, respectively. Fecal forms of at least 14 endoparasites were identified. The most frequently identified stages were those of Giardia (26.4&#xa0;%), Trichuris (9.5&#xa0;%), Toxocara (8.0&#xa0;%), hookworms (7.1&#xa0;%), Cystoisospora ohioensis (4.3&#xa0;%), and Cystoisospora canis (3&#xa0;%). For the first time for dogs in Albania, fecal examination indicated the occurrence of Hammondia/Neospora-like (0.2&#xa0;%), Angiostrongylus lungworm (0.3&#xa0;%), capillariid (2.8&#xa0;%), and Linguatula (0.2&#xa0;%) infections. Single and multiple infections with up to seven parasites concurrently were found in 152 (25.2&#xa0;%, 95&#xa0;% CI 21.8-28.9) and 93 dogs (15.4&#xa0;%, 95&#xa0;% CI 12.7-18.6), respectively. On univariate analysis, the dog's age, the dog's purpose (pet, hunting dog, working dog), the dog's habitat (city, suburban, rural), and environment (mainly indoors, indoors with regular outside walking, yard, kennel/run), presence/absence of other dogs and/or cats, history of anthelmintic use, and season of examination were identified as significant (p&#x2009;<&#x2009;0.05) factors predisposing dogs to various types of endoparasitism while the variables breed (pure breed dogs vs. mixed-breed dogs), gender, and type of food were not significant predictors. Multivariate logistic regression analysis for factors associated with overall endoparasitism revealed that dogs >1&#xa0;year of age (odds ratio [OR]&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.64), dogs dewormed at least once per year (OR&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.35), and dogs tested during spring, summer, and autumn (OR&#x2009;=&#x2009;0.51, 0.15, and 0.20, respectively) had a significantly lower risk compared with &#x2264;1&#xa0;year old dogs, dogs not dewormed, or dogs tested during winter. The odds of a dog to be diagnosed positive for endoparasites was 1.56 times higher for dogs living together with other pets than that for a dog without other dogs or cats.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26350379/