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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How common is Hepatozoon americanum in Gulf Coast ticks and can it be

By Parkins, Natalie D et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology, regional studies and reports·2020·Department of Basic Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Scarcity of Hepatozoon americanum in Gulf Coast tick vectors and potential for cultivating the protozoan.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A dog with American canine hepatozoonosis (ACH) showed symptoms like fever, weight loss, muscle weakness, and eye discharge. This disease is caused by a parasite called Hepatozoon americanum, which is spread not through bites but when dogs eat infected ticks. Researchers tested over 500 Gulf Coast ticks and found no evidence of the parasite, suggesting a low risk of transmission in those areas. However, they did find signs of the parasite in lab tests with infected dog blood, indicating more research is needed to understand how this disease spreads.

People also search for: dog fever weight loss eye discharge · Hepatozoon americanum treatment · tick-borne diseases in dogs

Abstract

American canine hepatozoonosis (ACH) is a debilitating tick-borne disease characterized by pyrexia, body wasting, myopathy, mucopurulent ocular discharge, and periosteal proliferation. The causative agent, Hepatozoon americanum, is an apicomplexan that utilizes the Gulf Coast tick, Amblyomma maculatum, as its definitive host and vector. Unlike most tick-borne disease agents, H. americanum is not transmitted via a tick bite, but is transmitted when canids ingest a tick vector that contains sporulated oocysts within the tick hemocoel or paratenic hosts with cystozoites. Our understanding of H. americanum prevalence is based on its detection in the intermediate host, wild or domestic canids, with domestic canids often showing clinical signs at the time of diagnosis. The frequency of H. americanum in A. maculatum, on the other hand, is unknown; this gap in our knowledge hinders our understanding of transmission risk. Furthermore, current diagnostic assays are limited in efficacy, and serologic assays are not widely available. To begin to address gaps in our knowledge, we developed a TaqMan® multiplex qPCR assay for H. americanum detection in A. maculatum tick extracts and evaluated infection rates in questing adult A. maculatum. Additionally, we used a co-culture system to expose H. americanum stages to host cells for in vitro development. Results from qPCR analysis of over 500 tick extracts revealed no positive samples; this suggests both low transmission risk by adult Gulf Coast tick ingestion in the sampled areas, and that surveillance should be focused in areas where ACH has been diagnosed at higher frequencies. Hepatozoon americanum was detectable by qPCR in co-culture of an infected canine buffy coat with ISE6 (Ixodes scapularis embryonic) tick cells, and microscopic examination of samples from those days revealed some structures that were suspicious for developing stages. These data are a starting point for future work to advance our understanding of H. americanum transmission and mechanisms of disease in canids with ACH.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32862908/