Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Leptospirosis blood test helps find hidden infections in vaccinated
By Andre-Fontaine, Geneviève et al.·Published in Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases·2015·Ecole Nationale Vé, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Undiagnosed leptospirosis cases in naïve and vaccinated dogs: properties of a serological test based on a synthetic peptide derived from Hap1/LipL32 (residues 154-178).
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with suspected leptospirosis (a bacterial infection) were tested using a new blood test that looks for specific antibodies. This was important because the usual test can give confusing results, especially in vaccinated dogs. The new test found signs of leptospirosis in 14 vaccinated dogs and 2 unvaccinated dogs that had previously tested negative. This suggests that the new test could help diagnose leptospirosis earlier than traditional methods, allowing for timely treatment.
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Abstract
Leptospirosis is a common disease in dogs, despite having current vaccinations. However, leptospirosis diagnosis based on the routine Microscopic Agglutination Test (MAT) leads to confusing conclusions, especially for infected vaccinated dogs. Indeed, both bacterin and natural infection stimulate the production of agglutinating antibodies. In experimentally infected dogs, antibodies against the peptide PP derived from Hap1/Lipl32 were raised earlier than agglutinating antibodies. The background level of these antibodies was determined in a group of 109 healthy dogs, either vaccinated or not against leptospirosis, with a specificity for IgM of 96.4% and for IgG of 95.5%. PP ELISA was subsequently performed with 118 sera from dogs with suspected leptospirosis that was not confirmed by MAT. New leptospirosis cases based on the PP ELISA results were suspected in 14 out of 102 vaccinated dogs and in two out of 16 non-vaccinated dogs. These results highlight the importance of serological diagnosis corresponding to an interesting window when it is too late for PCR detection and too early to be confirmed by MAT.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25659817/