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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Allergy antibody levels in dogs with severe leishmaniosis

By Cabré, Maria et al.·Published in Veterinary Dermatology·2025·Departament de Medicina i Cirurgia Animals Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Bellaterra Spain, Spain·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Serum Allergen‐Specific Immunoglobulin E Response in Dogs With Moderate‐To‐Severe Leishmaniosis

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with moderate-to-severe leishmaniosis (a disease caused by a parasite) showed high levels of specific antibodies related to allergens in their blood. In fact, all 40 dogs tested positive for at least one allergen, which was significantly more than the healthy and atopic dogs in the study. The findings suggest that while these dogs have elevated allergen-specific antibodies, it may not be clinically important for their health. Veterinarians should be careful when interpreting allergy tests for dogs with leishmaniosis, as the results might not reflect true allergies.

People also search for: dog leishmaniosis symptoms · dog allergy testing results · why is my dog itchy with leishmaniasis

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Dogs with moderate‐to‐severe leishmaniosis develop a strong nonprotective humoral response which is mainly associated with anti‐ Leishmania infantum antibodies. Humoral immune response also plays an important role in canine atopic dermatitis (cAD) and is associated with allergen‐specific immunoglobulin (Ig)E. Hypothesis/Objectives To compare the serum allergen‐specific IgE concentration in dogs with leishmaniosis and high levels of anti‐L. infantum‐specific antibodies with Leishmania seronegative clinically healthy and atopic dogs. Materials and Methods Serum samples from 47 dogs with leishmaniosis without cAD and high anti‐ L. infantum antibodies were included and compared with serum from 30 atopic and 33 clinically healthy dogs. Serum samples were analysed using a commercial kit for the quantitative measurement of allergen‐specific IgE. Dogs with anti‐cross‐reactive carbohydrate determinants (CCD)‐IgE were excluded. Results The proportion of dogs positive for at least one allergen was significantly higher in dogs with leishmaniosis (40 of 40) than in healthy (18 of 28) and atopic dogs (10 of 30) ( p < 0.001, Fisher's exact test). The median allergen‐specific IgE concentration was 7.1 U/mL in leishmaniotic dogs, 4.7 U/mL in atopic dogs and 1.4 U/mL in healthy dogs. A significant difference was observed between dogs with leishmaniosis and healthy dogs ( p < 0.001, Wilcoxon–Mann–Whitney U ‐test), while no differences were found between leishmaniotic and atopic dogs, and atopic and healthy dogs. Conclusions and Clinical Relevance Dogs with moderate‐to‐severe leishmaniosis and high levels of anti‐ L. infantum antibodies produce high levels of serum allergen‐specific IgE that do not appear to be of clinical relevance. Clinicians should cautiously interpret serological allergen tests in dogs with leishmaniosis.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/vde.70020