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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Doxycycline treatment for cats infected with Brugia malayi in Thailand

By Nochot, Hathai et al.·Published in Experimental parasitology·2019·Department of Parasitology·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Therapeutic efficacy of doxycycline in domestic cats naturally infected with Brugia malayi in field condition.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of domestic cats in Thailand were treated with doxycycline for a parasitic infection caused by Brugia malayi. After one month of treatment, five out of eight cats showed no signs of the infection, and by eight months, all cats were free of detectable parasites. The cats tolerated the doxycycline well, with no reported side effects. This treatment proved effective in clearing the infection and preventing its return for at least a year.

People also search for: cat Brugia malayi treatment · doxycycline for cat parasites · cat infection symptoms · how to treat cat microfilaria

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of oral doxycycline treatment for Brugia malayi as measured by microfilarial and filarial DNA clearance in naturally infected domestic cats. METHODS: This study included 8 domestic cats that lived with families that resided in Tak Bai District of Narathiwat Province, which is located in Southern Thailand. The study area is a known B. malayi endemic area. All study cats received doxycycline treatment doses by their respective owners according to a previously described protocol. Briefly, doxycycline (VibraVet) was given orally once a day during weeks 1-4, 10-11, and 16-17. Blood collections were performed at baseline before treatment, and then every month for 12 months after the initial dose of doxycycline to assess microfilaraemia by Giemsa stain, and filarial DNA detection by high-resolution melt (HRM) real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR). RESULTS: One month after the start of doxycycline treatment, five of eight cats were negative for microfilaraemia, and 4 of those were negative for filarial DNA. All cats receiving doxycycline treatment were negative for microfilaria by Giemsa stain, and for filarial DNA by HRM real-time PCR within 8 months after receiving the initial dose of doxycycline treatment. CONCLUSION: Administration of oral doxycycline to domestic cats naturally infected with B. malayi in disease endemic areas can significantly reduce microfilaraemia at 1 month and filarial DNA was undetectable by 8 months after the initial dose of doxycycline treatment. No recurrence of microfilaraemia or filarial DNA was observed in study cats at 1 year after the start of doxycycline. Included cats appeared to tolerate doxycycline (VibraVet) well, with no adverse drug reactions reported by any study cat owner.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30953626/