Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Bartonella infection in US military working dogs with heart infection
By Davis, A Z et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary cardiology : the official journal of the European Society of Veterinary Cardiology·2020·Department of Population Health and Reproduction, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Prevalence of Bartonella sp. in United States military working dogs with infectious endocarditis: a retrospective case-control study.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of military working dogs was found to have a high prevalence of Bartonella infection, which is linked to serious heart conditions like endocarditis (infection of the heart lining). Out of 26 dogs diagnosed with heart issues, 19 tested positive for Bartonella, with different species identified. This suggests that Bartonella could be a significant cause of heart problems in these dogs. To help prevent these infections, it's recommended that military working dogs receive regular testing for Bartonella and use insecticides to control parasites that can spread the infection.
People also search for: military working dog heart problems · Bartonella infection in dogs · dog endocarditis treatment
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Bartonella infection has been associated with endocarditis in humans, dogs, cats and cattle. In order to evaluate the importance of this pathogen as a possible source of endocarditis in United States military working dogs (MWDs), we performed a retrospective case-control study on 26 dogs with histological diagnosis of culture negative endocarditis (n = 18), endomyocarditis (n = 5) or endocardiosis (n = 3) and 28 control dogs without any histological cardiac lesions. METHODS: DNA was extracted from paraffin embedded cardiac valves and tissues from case and control dogs and submitted to PCR testing with primers targeting the Bartonella gltA gene. PCR-RFLP using four restriction endonucleases and partial sequencing was then performed to determine the Bartonella species involved. RESULTS: Nineteen (73%) cases were PCR positive for Bartonella, including B. henselae (8 dogs), B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii (6 dogs), B. washoensis (2 dogs) and B. elizabethae (1 dog). Only one control dog was weakly PCR positive for Bartonella. Based on the type of histological diagnosis, 13 (72.2%) dogs with endocarditis, 3 (60%) dogs with endomyocarditis and all 3 dogs with endocardiosis were Bartonella PCR positive. CONCLUSIONS: Bartonella sp. Infections were correlated with cardiopathies in US military working dogs. Systemic use of insecticides against ectoparasites and regular testing of MWDs for Bartonella infection seem highly appropriate to prevent such life-threatening exposures.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31830708/