Cargando…

Endoparasites in dogs diagnosed at the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (VTH)-University of Bologna, combined with clinicopathological results. A long-term retrospective secondary data study

Humans and dogs commonly share the same domestic environment. Europe, and Italy specifically, have a substantial and growing dog population. Potentially zoonotic parasites may be harbored even by dogs receiving regular veterinary care. Thus, transmission of zoonotic or potentially zoonotic parasites...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Morandi, Benedetto, Sabetti, Maria Chiara, Napoleoni, Maira, Pascucci, Ilaria, Orlandi, Gionata, Pietra, Marco, VanLeeuwen, John A., Greenwood, Spencer J., Poglayen, Giovanni, Galuppi, Roberta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10588848/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37862344
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293330
_version_ 1785123665065541632
author Morandi, Benedetto
Sabetti, Maria Chiara
Napoleoni, Maira
Pascucci, Ilaria
Orlandi, Gionata
Pietra, Marco
VanLeeuwen, John A.
Greenwood, Spencer J.
Poglayen, Giovanni
Galuppi, Roberta
author_facet Morandi, Benedetto
Sabetti, Maria Chiara
Napoleoni, Maira
Pascucci, Ilaria
Orlandi, Gionata
Pietra, Marco
VanLeeuwen, John A.
Greenwood, Spencer J.
Poglayen, Giovanni
Galuppi, Roberta
author_sort Morandi, Benedetto
collection PubMed
description Humans and dogs commonly share the same domestic environment. Europe, and Italy specifically, have a substantial and growing dog population. Potentially zoonotic parasites may be harbored even by dogs receiving regular veterinary care. Thus, transmission of zoonotic or potentially zoonotic parasites to owners and their families should not be underestimated. Frequently, endoparasite infections occur as a subclinical infection and clinicopathological alterations have been documented including anemia, hypoalbuminemia, and eosinophilia. The aim of this large retrospective secondary data study was to analyze coprological endoparasite results and putative risk factors obtained from owned dogs, through a 9-year-period (2011–2019). Possible associations between diagnosed endoparasites and sex, age, seasonality, and year of examination were evaluated. Additionally, parasitological diagnoses were combined to complete blood count parameters and biochemical profiles, when available, to check for any possible hematological alteration from parasitism. A total of 1,972 dogs were evaluated for endoparasites using common fecal diagnostic tests over a 9-year period. The overall proportion of endoparasite-positive animals was 10%. The most common endoparasites detected were Cystoisospora spp. (3%), Toxocara canis (2.8%), Giardia duodenalis (1.6%), and Trichuris vulpis (1.2%). Of these parasites detected, Toxocara poses the greatest zoonotic risk, while Giardia species are considered to have a low potential to be zoonotic. There was no significant diagnostic trend across the years through the study period. Dogs were more frequently diagnosed endoparasite-positive when young and during cold seasons compared to the baselines of mature dogs and warm seasons. The clinicopathological profiles indicated that parasitized dogs had mild hematological alterations. The frequency of detected potentially zoonotic endoparasites in this study highlights that the risk should not be underestimated. Parasitic infection was found to be mostly dependent on age and season. Having this information may help clinicians to develop anthelmintic protocols to reduce the risk of transmission.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10588848
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105888482023-10-21 Endoparasites in dogs diagnosed at the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (VTH)-University of Bologna, combined with clinicopathological results. A long-term retrospective secondary data study Morandi, Benedetto Sabetti, Maria Chiara Napoleoni, Maira Pascucci, Ilaria Orlandi, Gionata Pietra, Marco VanLeeuwen, John A. Greenwood, Spencer J. Poglayen, Giovanni Galuppi, Roberta PLoS One Research Article Humans and dogs commonly share the same domestic environment. Europe, and Italy specifically, have a substantial and growing dog population. Potentially zoonotic parasites may be harbored even by dogs receiving regular veterinary care. Thus, transmission of zoonotic or potentially zoonotic parasites to owners and their families should not be underestimated. Frequently, endoparasite infections occur as a subclinical infection and clinicopathological alterations have been documented including anemia, hypoalbuminemia, and eosinophilia. The aim of this large retrospective secondary data study was to analyze coprological endoparasite results and putative risk factors obtained from owned dogs, through a 9-year-period (2011–2019). Possible associations between diagnosed endoparasites and sex, age, seasonality, and year of examination were evaluated. Additionally, parasitological diagnoses were combined to complete blood count parameters and biochemical profiles, when available, to check for any possible hematological alteration from parasitism. A total of 1,972 dogs were evaluated for endoparasites using common fecal diagnostic tests over a 9-year period. The overall proportion of endoparasite-positive animals was 10%. The most common endoparasites detected were Cystoisospora spp. (3%), Toxocara canis (2.8%), Giardia duodenalis (1.6%), and Trichuris vulpis (1.2%). Of these parasites detected, Toxocara poses the greatest zoonotic risk, while Giardia species are considered to have a low potential to be zoonotic. There was no significant diagnostic trend across the years through the study period. Dogs were more frequently diagnosed endoparasite-positive when young and during cold seasons compared to the baselines of mature dogs and warm seasons. The clinicopathological profiles indicated that parasitized dogs had mild hematological alterations. The frequency of detected potentially zoonotic endoparasites in this study highlights that the risk should not be underestimated. Parasitic infection was found to be mostly dependent on age and season. Having this information may help clinicians to develop anthelmintic protocols to reduce the risk of transmission. Public Library of Science 2023-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC10588848/ /pubmed/37862344 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293330 Text en © 2023 Morandi et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Morandi, Benedetto
Sabetti, Maria Chiara
Napoleoni, Maira
Pascucci, Ilaria
Orlandi, Gionata
Pietra, Marco
VanLeeuwen, John A.
Greenwood, Spencer J.
Poglayen, Giovanni
Galuppi, Roberta
Endoparasites in dogs diagnosed at the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (VTH)-University of Bologna, combined with clinicopathological results. A long-term retrospective secondary data study
title Endoparasites in dogs diagnosed at the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (VTH)-University of Bologna, combined with clinicopathological results. A long-term retrospective secondary data study
title_full Endoparasites in dogs diagnosed at the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (VTH)-University of Bologna, combined with clinicopathological results. A long-term retrospective secondary data study
title_fullStr Endoparasites in dogs diagnosed at the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (VTH)-University of Bologna, combined with clinicopathological results. A long-term retrospective secondary data study
title_full_unstemmed Endoparasites in dogs diagnosed at the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (VTH)-University of Bologna, combined with clinicopathological results. A long-term retrospective secondary data study
title_short Endoparasites in dogs diagnosed at the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (VTH)-University of Bologna, combined with clinicopathological results. A long-term retrospective secondary data study
title_sort endoparasites in dogs diagnosed at the veterinary teaching hospital (vth)-university of bologna, combined with clinicopathological results. a long-term retrospective secondary data study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10588848/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37862344
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293330
work_keys_str_mv AT morandibenedetto endoparasitesindogsdiagnosedattheveterinaryteachinghospitalvthuniversityofbolognacombinedwithclinicopathologicalresultsalongtermretrospectivesecondarydatastudy
AT sabettimariachiara endoparasitesindogsdiagnosedattheveterinaryteachinghospitalvthuniversityofbolognacombinedwithclinicopathologicalresultsalongtermretrospectivesecondarydatastudy
AT napoleonimaira endoparasitesindogsdiagnosedattheveterinaryteachinghospitalvthuniversityofbolognacombinedwithclinicopathologicalresultsalongtermretrospectivesecondarydatastudy
AT pascucciilaria endoparasitesindogsdiagnosedattheveterinaryteachinghospitalvthuniversityofbolognacombinedwithclinicopathologicalresultsalongtermretrospectivesecondarydatastudy
AT orlandigionata endoparasitesindogsdiagnosedattheveterinaryteachinghospitalvthuniversityofbolognacombinedwithclinicopathologicalresultsalongtermretrospectivesecondarydatastudy
AT pietramarco endoparasitesindogsdiagnosedattheveterinaryteachinghospitalvthuniversityofbolognacombinedwithclinicopathologicalresultsalongtermretrospectivesecondarydatastudy
AT vanleeuwenjohna endoparasitesindogsdiagnosedattheveterinaryteachinghospitalvthuniversityofbolognacombinedwithclinicopathologicalresultsalongtermretrospectivesecondarydatastudy
AT greenwoodspencerj endoparasitesindogsdiagnosedattheveterinaryteachinghospitalvthuniversityofbolognacombinedwithclinicopathologicalresultsalongtermretrospectivesecondarydatastudy
AT poglayengiovanni endoparasitesindogsdiagnosedattheveterinaryteachinghospitalvthuniversityofbolognacombinedwithclinicopathologicalresultsalongtermretrospectivesecondarydatastudy
AT galuppiroberta endoparasitesindogsdiagnosedattheveterinaryteachinghospitalvthuniversityofbolognacombinedwithclinicopathologicalresultsalongtermretrospectivesecondarydatastudy