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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Heart injury and irregular heartbeat in dogs with Toxoplasma infection

By Romito, Giovanni et al.·Published in The Journal of veterinary medical science·2022·Department of Veterinary Medical Sciences, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Reversible myocardial injury aggravated by complex arrhythmias in three Toxoplasma gondii-positive dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Three dogs with Toxoplasma gondii infection were diagnosed with heart muscle injury (myocarditis) and experienced serious heart rhythm problems. They showed elevated levels of a heart protein (troponin) and had abnormal heart rhythms. The dogs were treated with medications to fight the infection and to stabilize their heart rhythms. After treatment, their heart function improved, troponin levels returned to normal, and they showed no signs of relapse during follow-up visits.

People also search for: dog heart problems treatment · Toxoplasma gondii in dogs · myocarditis symptoms in dogs

Abstract

Although Toxoplasma gondii represents an oft-cited cause of myocarditis in veterinary medicine, the existing literature on the pre-mortem demonstration of T. gondii-associated myocardial injury (MI) in dogs is scant. In this case series, we provide detailed clinical, laboratory, echocardiographic and electrocardiographic description of three T. gondii-positive dogs diagnosed with MI. In all cases, etiological diagnosis was based on the antibody screening test (all dogs had IgM titres &#x2265;1:64) and MI was demonstrated by a concomitant increase of the serum concentration of cardiac troponin I (0.25-9.6 ng/ml, upper hospital limit <0.15 ng/ml). In all dogs, MI was aggravated by complex arrhythmias (ventricular in two dogs, and either ventricular and supraventricular in the remaining dog). In one case, left ventricular systolic dysfunction was also present. All dogs underwent an extensive diagnostic work-up aimed at excluding additional comorbidities, either cardiac and extra-cardiac, possibly able to contribute to MI, arrhythmias and systolic dysfunction. All dogs received appropriate antiprotozoal (i.e., clindamycin) and antiarrhythmic (i.e., amiodarone, sotalol) therapy. This was systematically followed by a simultaneous decline in T. gondii serology titres, normalisation of troponin level and left ventricular systolic function, and the resolution of clinical and electrocardiographic abnormalities. In light of this result, therapies were interrupted and subsequent controls ruled out any disease relapse. In these cases, the clinical and instrumental findings obtained at admission and rechecks strongly supported the clinical suspicion of toxoplasmic myocarditis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34955461/