Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with severe low blood sugar from Trypanosoma congolense infection
By Deschamps, Jack-Yves et al.·Published in Parasite (Paris, France)·2016·School of Veterinary Medicine, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Refractory hypoglycaemia in a dog infected with Trypanosoma congolense.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 20 kg German shepherd was brought to the vet for seizures and a high fever after returning from a six-month trip to Senegal. Blood tests showed extremely low blood sugar levels, along with anemia and low platelet counts. Despite giving the dog large amounts of glucose, the blood sugar remained dangerously low, and tests revealed an infection with Trypanosoma congolense, a type of parasite. The dog was treated with pentamidine injections, which successfully cleared the infection and improved its health. However, years later, tests showed the dog might still have been infected, leaving some uncertainty about its long-term status.
People also search for: dog seizures and low blood sugar · German shepherd Trypanosoma infection · treatment for dog hypoglycaemia
Abstract
A 20 kg German shepherd dog was presented to a French veterinary teaching hospital for seizures and hyperthermia. The dog had returned 1 month previously from a six-month stay in Senegal and sub-Saharan Africa. Biochemistry and haematology showed severe hypoglycaemia (0.12 g/L), anaemia and thrombocytopenia. Despite administration of large amounts of glucose (30 mL of 30% glucose IV and 10 mL of 70% sucrose by gavage tube hourly), 26 consecutive blood glucose measurements were below 0.25 g/L (except one). Routine cytological examination of blood smears revealed numerous free extracytoplasmic protozoa consistent with Trypanosoma congolense. PCR confirmed a Trypanosoma congolense forest-type infection. Treatment consisted of six injections of pentamidine at 48-hour intervals. Trypanosomes had disappeared from the blood smears four days following the first injection. Clinical improvement was correlated with the normalization of laboratory values. The infection relapsed twice and the dog was treated again; clinical signs and parasites disappeared and the dog was considered cured; however, 6 years after this incident, serological examination by ELISA T. congolense was positive. The status of this dog (infected or non-infected) remains unclear. Hypoglycaemia was the most notable clinical feature in this case. It was spectacular in its severity and in its refractory nature; glucose administration seemed only to feed the trypanosomes, indicating that treatment of hypoglycaemia may in fact have been detrimental.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26795063/