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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Ticks carrying Babesia canis linked to dog babesiosis outbreaks

By Schaarschmidt, Daniel et al.·Published in Ticks and tick-borne diseases·2013·Labor am Zugersee·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Questing Dermacentor reticulatus harbouring Babesia canis DNA associated with outbreaks of canine babesiosis in the Swiss Midlands.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

In 2011 and 2012, a group of 29 dogs in the Swiss Midlands showed signs of canine babesiosis, a serious disease caused by a parasite spread by ticks. Sadly, four of these dogs died. The illness was confirmed through blood tests that identified the parasite Babesia canis. Interestingly, one dog had a history of babesiosis and had traveled to Hungary, suggesting it may have brought the infection back. The study found that the same parasite was present in ticks from the area, indicating that local conditions allowed the disease to spread. Pet owners should be aware of this disease, especially if their dogs show symptoms like fever or lethargy after being in tick-infested areas.

People also search for: dog fever tick disease · canine babesiosis symptoms · how to prevent ticks on dogs

Abstract

In 2011 and 2012, outbreaks of clinical canine babesiosis were observed in 2 areas of the Swiss Midlands that had no history of this disease so far. In one area, cases of canine babesiosis occurred over 2 consecutive tick seasons. The outbreaks involved 29 dogs, 4 of which died. All dogs were infected with large Babesia sp. as diagnosed in Giemsa-stained blood smears and/or PCR. These were identified as B. canis (formerly known as B. canis canis) by subsequent partial sequencing of the 18S rRNA gene of Babesia sp. Interestingly, the sequence indicated either a genotype with heterogeneity in the ssrRNA gene copies or double infection with different B. canis isolates. None of the dogs had a recent travel history, but one had frequently travelled to Hungary and had suffered twice from clinical babesiosis 18 and 24 months prior to the outbreak in autumn 2011. Retrospective sequencing of a stored blood DNA sample of this dog revealed B. canis, with an identical sequence to the Babesia involved in the outbreaks. For the first time in Switzerland, the partial 18S rRNA gene of B. canis could be amplified from DNA isolated from 19 out of 23 adult Dermacentor reticulatus ticks flagged in the same area. The sequence was identical to that found in the dogs. Furthermore, one affected dog carried a female D. reticulatus tick harbouring B. canis DNA. Our findings illustrate that, under favourable biogeographic and climatic conditions, the life-cycle of B. canis can relatively rapidly establish itself in previously non-endemic areas. Canine babesiosis should therefore always be a differential diagnosis when dogs with typical clinical signs are presented, regardless of known endemic areas.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23571114/