| Literature DB >> 24626325 |
Lénaïg Halos1, Isabelle Lebert2, David Abrial2, Fabien Danlois3, Karin Garzik4, Daniel Rodes1, Monika Schillmeier4, Christian Ducrot2, Jacques Guillot5.
Abstract
The incidence of canine babesiosis may vary considerably from one country to another depending on the distribution of the causative parasite species and their specific vectors. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the clinical occurrence of canine babesiosis diagnosed in European veterinary clinics and propose an updated map of the disease distribution in Western Europe. Questionnaires were sent to companion animal veterinary clinics in Spain, France, Benelux, Germany and Austria. The annual number of babesiosis cases in 2010, the number of practitioners in the clinic and the location of the clinic were recorded. The total numbers of dogs and practitioners in each country were used for definition of the reference populations and the annual incidence of canine babesiosis was calculated by dividing the total number of reported babesiosis cases by the total number of dogs in the veterinary practices involved in the study. Data were georeferenced for distribution map construction. The overall annual incidence of clinical babesiosis amongst the investigated dog population was 0.7%, with significant variations amongst countries and regions. Three epidemiological situations were described: (i) Spain, with co-existence of several species of piroplasms and patchy distribution of babesiosis, (ii) France, with overall presence of babesiosis due to Babesia canis and local variations and (iii) Benelux, Germany and Austria, with overall low prevalence of the disease associated with localised description related either to imported cases or to small autochthonous foci of B. canis infection. © L. Halos et al., published by EDP Sciences, 2014.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24626325 PMCID: PMC3952654 DOI: 10.1051/parasite/2014015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasite ISSN: 1252-607X Impact factor: 3.000
Reference data on dogs and veterinarians per country used for the analyses and data (number of answers and number of cases of canine babesiosis) obtained in the survey.
| Austria | Belgium | France | Germany | Luxembourg | The Netherlands | Spain | |
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| Total number of administrative regions with answers/Total number of administrative regions | 6/9 | 3/3 | 22/22 | 15/16 | 1/1 | 9/12 | 15/19 |
| Total number of dogs in the country | 61,2000 | 1,330,700 | 7,595,000 | 5,300,000 | 35,000 | 1,493,000 | 4,720,000 |
| Total number of vets in the country | 1000 | 2370 | 10,652 | 10,437 | 45 | 3608 | 8500 |
| Number of vets included in the study | 151 | 462 | 1884 | 570 | 4 | 274 | 329 |
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| Number of canine babesiosis cases diagnosed in 2010 | 163 | 38 | 12,064 | 150 | 0 | 13 | 2383 |
Data from the European Pet Food Industry Federation (http://www.fediaf.org/facts-figures/).
Data from the Bundestierärztekammer (BTK, Berlin) in Germany, Syndicat National des Vétérinaires d’Exercice Libéral (SNVEL, Paris) in France, Union Professionnelle Vétérinaire (UPV, Nivelles) in Belgium and Luxembourg, the Dutch veterinary association (KNMvD, Houten) in the Netherlands, Leonardo Da Vinci II in Spain.
Figure 1.Geographical distribution of the incidence of canine babesiosis amongst the general dog population in Western Europe regions in 2010. Initials of the countries are indicated as: Spain (S), France (F), Belgium (B), Luxembourg (L), the Netherlands (N), Germany (G) and Austria (A). The colour gradient (from grey to red) indicates an increasing incidence. Score tests compared the regional incidence and the Western European incidence. The white circle indicates that regional incidence was significantly lower than the Western European incidence. The star indicates that regional incidence was significantly higher than the Western European incidence. The cross indicates that no score test was applicable.