| Literature DB >> 25886403 |
Laia Solano-Gallego1,2, Alessandra Caprì3,4, Maria Grazia Pennisi5, Marco Caldin6, Tommaso Furlanello7, Michele Trotta8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rickettsia conorii is transmitted by Rhipicephalus sanguineus ticks and causes Mediterranean Spotted Fever (MSF) in humans. Although dogs are considered the natural host of the vector, the clinical and epidemiological significance of R. conorii infection in dogs remains unclear. The aim of this prospective study was to investigate whether Rickettsia infection causes febrile illness in dogs living in areas endemic for human MSF.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25886403 PMCID: PMC4407383 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-015-0824-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Description of dog population characteristics
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| 58/159 (37.1%) | 101/159 (63.5%) | 94/171 (54.9%) | 77/171 (45%) | 16/161 (9.9%) | 145/161 (90%) | 31/121 (25.6%) | 90/121 (74.3) |
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| 40/58** (68.9%) | 53/101 (52.4%) | 40/94 (42.5%) | 45/77 (58.4%) | 13/16 (81.2%) | 85/145 (58.6%) | 29/31*** (93.5%) | 46/90 (51.1%) |
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| 18/58 (31%) | 48/101 (47.5%) | 54/94 (57.4%) | 32/77 (42.8%) | 3/16 (18.7%) | 60/145 (41.3%) | 2/31 (6.4%) | 44/90 (48.8%) |
*For age classification, young was considered as less than 12 months of age and adult was considered as above 12 months of age **Chi-square = 4.126, P = 0.042 ***Chi-square = 17.622, P < 0.0001.
Seroreactivity to several tick-borne pathogens antigens in febrile and afebrile dogs at the time of first and second visit
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| 53 (55.8%)* | 21 (30.0%) | 74 (44.8%) | 29 (65.9%)** | 15 (31.2%) | 44 (47.8%) |
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| 47 (50.0%) | 32 (46.4%) | 79 (48.5%) | 15 (34.1%) | 11 (22.9%) | 26 (28.2%) |
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| 38 (40.4%) | 24 (34.3%) | 62 (37.8%) | 9 (20.4%) | 7 (14.6%) | 16 (17.4%) |
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| 20 (20.2%) | 10 (14.1%) | 30 (17.6%) | Not determined | ||
*Chi-square = 10.837, P = 0.001;**Chi-square = 11.052, P = 0.002; *** Number of febrile dogs was 99; Number of afebrile dogs was 71; total number of dogs was 170.
Seroconversion results for , , in febrile and afebrile dogs
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| 13 (29.5%, 18-44%)* | 6 (12.5%, 5-25%) | 19 (20.7%, 13-30%) |
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| 7 (16.3%, 7-29%) | 6 (12.5%, 5-25%) | 13 (14.3%, 8-22%) |
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| 3 (7.0%, 1-18%) | 5 (10.4%, 4-22%) | 8 (8.8%, 4-16%) |
*Chi-square = 4.070, P = 0.0436;**Number of febrile dogs was 43; number of total dogs was 91.
Molecular prevalence of all pathogens in febrile and afebrile dogs at the first visit
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| 3 (3.0%)* | 0 (0%) | 3 (1.8%) |
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| 7 (7.1%)** | 0 (0%) | 7 (4.1%) |
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| 3 (3.0%) | 1 (1.4%) | 4 (2.3%) |
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| 4 (4.0%) | 0 (0%) | 4 (2.3%) |
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| 1 (1.0%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (0.6%) |
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| 14 (14.1%) | 5 (6.9%) | 19 (11.1%) |
*All dogs were positive to 16SrRNA and OmpA PCRs; ** Fisher’s exact test, P = 0.042