Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Leishmania infection rates in dogs in Alijó, Portugal
By Cardoso, Luís et al.·Published in Veterinary parasitology·2004·Department of Hygiene and Animal Health·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Sero-epidemiological study of canine Leishmania spp. infection in the municipality of Alijó (Alto Douro, Portugal).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A survey of dogs in Alijó, Portugal, found that 18.7% tested positive for Leishmania infection, which can cause serious health issues. The study involved testing blood samples from over 1,500 dogs, revealing that older dogs, particularly those aged 9-11 years, were more likely to be infected. Interestingly, only a small percentage of the infected dogs showed any symptoms, and the overall disease prevalence was low at 1.1%. The researchers confirmed that a specific blood test (the direct agglutination test) is effective for detecting this infection in dogs.
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Abstract
Visceral leishmaniosis caused by Leishmania infantum is a zoonotic disease in the Mediterranean basin. We report an epidemiological survey carried out in dogs from the municipality of Alijó in the endemic region of Alto Douro (north Portugal). Performance of the direct agglutination test (DAT) was assessed in 205 matching samples of blood collected on filter paper and serum. A high degree of agreement (97.6%; k = 0.83) was found between the results obtained from both types of samples. DAT was then used to test more blood on filter paper (B-FP) samples from other dogs of the same municipality. The detected sero-prevalence was 18.7% (288/1540), with values ranging from 0.0 to 81.1% in each of the 19 parishes of Alijó. Three distinct geographical zones of mean sero-prevalence could be defined: northwestern (2.5%), intermediate (11.4%) and southern (49.9%). No statistically significant difference was observed between male (19.1%) and female (17.8%) sero-prevalences (P = 0.560). Dogs of 9-11 years of age showed the highest sero-prevalence (28.4%), but all the other age-intervals (0-2, 3-5, 6-8 and 12-17 years) presented values (15.0-22.3%) not significantly different from the mean of the whole study population. Risk factors for canine Leishmania infection were age and geographical zone. Only 5.9% of the sero-positive animals had clinical signs of canine leishmaniosis and the overall prevalence of disease was 1.1%. This study validates the use of B-FP samples and confirms DAT as a simple and sensitive serological test to evaluate the level of canine Leishmania infection in areas of high sero-prevalence.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15110400/