Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Confusing reticulocyte test results in a dog with babesiosis
By Piane, Laetitia et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2016·Equipe de Biologie Mé, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Spurious reticulocyte profiles in a dog with babesiosis.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 9-year-old female Maltese dog was brought to the vet after showing signs of not eating and weakness for two days. During the exam, the vet found that she had a fever, abdominal pain, and rapid breathing. Blood tests revealed several issues, including high levels of bilirubin and creatinine, along with a low red blood cell count due to a parasitic infection called babesiosis. The vet noted unusual results in the reticulocyte count, which measures young red blood cells, likely due to the presence of the parasites. Treatment for babesiosis typically involves specific medications, and with proper care, many dogs can recover from this condition.
People also search for: Maltese dog weakness · dog fever and not eating · babesiosis treatment in dogs
Abstract
A 9-year-old, female Maltese dog was referred to the Veterinary School of Toulouse with a 2-day history of anorexia and weakness. On clinical examination, the dog had hyperthermia (39.7°C), abdominal discomfort, and polypnea. Significant laboratory findings included pigmenturia, hyperbilirubinemia, hypercreatininemia, hyperfibrinogenemia, abnormal Snap canine pancreas-specific lipase, and pancytopenia with a nonregenerative anemia. A peripheral blood smear revealed numerous intraerythrocytic large Babesia but no polychromasia. There was a discrepancy between the absolute automated reticulocyte count (Sysmex reticulocyte count: 60 × 10/L; RI 19.4-150.1 × 10/L) and the manual reticulocyte count (3.6 × 10/L) as well as the absence of polychromasia. The optical red blood cell scattergram showed an abnormal isolated reticulocyte cluster at the location of low-fluorescence ratio cells. These findings were interpreted as erythrocytes parasitized by large Babesia. The discrepancy between the Sysmex reticulocyte count and the manual reticulocyte count has been reported previously in people with falciparum malaria and numerous intra-erythrocytic Plasmodium falciparum organisms. This spurious reticulocyte profile and reticulocyte count were observed with the Sysmex XT-2000iV and the ProCyte using the same fluorescent dye polymethine but not with the LaserCyte using new methylene blue which does not stain Babesia organisms on a blood smear performed for manual reticulocyte counting.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27755775/