| Literature DB >> 27289223 |
Laia Solano-Gallego1, Ángel Sainz2, Xavier Roura3, Agustín Estrada-Peña4, Guadalupe Miró5.
Abstract
Canine babesiosis is a significant tick-borne disease caused by various species of the protozoan genus Babesia. Although it occurs worldwide, data relating to European infections have now been collected for many years. These data have boosted the publication record and increased our working knowledge of these protozoan parasites. Both the large and small forms of Babesia species (B. canis, B. vogeli, B. gibsoni, and B. microti-like isolates also referred to as "B. vulpes" and "Theileria annae") infect dogs in Europe, and their geographical distribution, transmission, clinical signs, treatment, and prognosis vary widely for each species. The goal of this review is to provide veterinary practitioners with practical guidelines for the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of babesiosis in European dogs. Our hope is that these guidelines will answer the most frequently asked questions posed by veterinary practitioners.Entities:
Keywords: Babesia; Babesiosis; Canine; Consensus; Guideline
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27289223 PMCID: PMC4902949 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-016-1596-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Geographical distribution, relevant vectors, and the expected size of Babesia spp. in blood smears. Data for the primary Babesia species found in Europe provided
| Species | Geographical distribution | Vector | Approximate size (μm) in a blood smear | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Described across most of Europe (from Portugal to the north and east of Europe), and especially common in cool and wet climates. Higher prevalence in central Europe and lower prevalence in the Mediterranean basin |
| 2.5 × 4.5 | [ |
|
| Albania, Croatia, France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovenia, Spain and Turkey |
| 2.5 × 4.5 | [ |
|
| Croatia, Germany, Italy, Serbia, Slovakia, Spain and United Kingdom |
| 1 × 3 | [ |
|
| Croatia, France, Italy, Portugal, Serbia, Spain and Sweden |
| 1 × 2.5 | [ |
aVectorial ability has not been demonstrated in the laboratory; its role is an assumption based on epidemiological data
Fig. 1The distribution of canine Babesia species in Europe in dogs based mainly on molecular analysis. Note the presence of B. canis and B. microti-like sp. mostly in the cooler climate zones of north and central Europe while infection with B. vogeli is mainly around the Mediterranean basin. The references for each country are included in the reference list. Figure updated from Solano-Gallego & Baneth [4]
Prevalence of canine infection by Babesia spp. in Europe
| Species | Country | Prevalence in % (population studied) | Technique employed | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Slovenia | 4.6 (238) | PCR | [ |
| Spaina | 1.3 (153) | PCR | [ | |
| Spaina | 10 (120) | PCR | [ | |
| Italya | 20.7 (164) | PCR | [ | |
| Italy | 2.3 (420) | PCR | [ | |
| Italyb | 70 (249) | IFAT | [ | |
| Polandb | 25.3 (82) | PCR | [ | |
| Croatia | 2.3 (848) | PCR | [ | |
| Romania | 44.8 (216) | PCR | [ | |
| Romaniaa | 71.4 (49) | PCR | [ | |
| Slovakiac | 3.5 (366) | PCR | [ | |
| Lithuaniaa | 87.8 (123) | PCR | [ | |
| Turkey | 0.1 (757) | PCR | [ | |
| France | 12.9 (140) | PCR | [ | |
| Bulgaria | 16.2 (167) | ELISA | [ | |
|
| Slovenia | 1.3 (238) | PCR | [ |
| Italya | 6.7 (164) | PCR | [ | |
| Italya | 4 (99) | PCR | [ | |
| Croatia | 0.2 (848) | PCR | [ | |
| Serbia | 1.9 (158) | PCR | [ | |
| Spaina | 2 (153) | PCR | [ | |
| France | 0.9 (108) | PCR | [ | |
| France | 13.6 (140) | PCR | [ | |
|
| Croatia | 0.7 (848) | PCR | [ |
| Serbia | 5.7 (158) | PCR | [ | |
| Spaina | 2 (153) | PCR | [ | |
| Spaina | 2.5 (120) | PCR | [ | |
| Romaniaa | 28.6 (49) | PCR | [ | |
|
| Spaina | 1.9 (2,979) | Microscopy and PCR | [ |
| Spaina | 62.5 (120) | Microscopy and PCR | [ | |
| Spaina | 0.7 (153) | PCR | [ | |
| Croatia | 0.1 (848) | PCR | [ | |
| France | 0.7 (140) | PCR | [ | |
| Serbia | 10.1 (158) | PCR | [ |
aStudy conducted using dogs with a suspected infection, transmitted by ticks/babesiosis
bStudy conducted using shelter dogs
cStudy conducted in Dirofilaria-infected dogs
dPrevalence studies performed in Europe are rare, although clinical cases have been described at various locations
Primary clinical manifestations and prognosis for dogs infected with the different species of Babesia found in Europe [4]
|
|
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| History and features | Young dogs, adult dogs, hunting dogs/sheepdogs (German Shepherd and Komondor) that live outdoors. A greater number of cases is seen in autumn, and spring | Puppies or adult/older dogs with concomitant infectious or non-infectious diseases | Common in fighting dogs (Pit Bull Terrier and Tosa) | Young, adult dogs, guard/hunting dogs that live outdoors |
| Severity of disease | Moderate to severe | Mild to moderate | Moderate to severe | Moderate to severe |
| Clinical signs and laboratory abnormalities that differ among | Petechiae, epistaxis, vomiting, lymphadenomegaly, hypotension, low T3 syndrome, mild to moderate nonregenerative, normochromic, and normocytic anaemia, regenerative anaemia (less common), leukopenia with neutropenia and/or lymphopenia, hypoalbuminemia, elevation of liver enzymes (ALT, AST, ALP), hypokalemia, hyponatremia, and hyperchloremia, hyperlactatemia, hyperphosphatemia, hypertriglyceridemia, hypoglycemia, prerenal and renal azotemia | Regenerative immune-mediated hemolytic anaemia, nonregenerative anaemia, leukocytosis and leukopenia | Lymph node enlargement, enlargement of the spleen, small-bowel diarrhea, weight loss, protein-losing nephropathy, PU/PD, and abdominal effusion. Mild to severe regenerative immune-mediated hemolytic anaemia, neutropenia and leukocytosis. Hypoalbuminemia, azotemia and elevation of liver enzymes (ALT, ALP) | Azotemia, proteinuria, cylindruria and hyperglobulinemia |
| Course of infection related to disease manifestation | Acute | Acute and chronic | Acute and chronic | Acute and chronic? |
| Prognosis | Good to poor | Good | Guarded to poor | Guarded to poor |
| Reference | [ | [ | [ | [ |
Common clinical signs and laboratory abnormalities among Babesia spp.: Fever, lethargy, anorexia, pale mucous membranes, weakness, bounding pulse, jaundice, pigmenturia, mild to severe thrombocytopenia, mild to severe regenerative anaemia due to hemolysis, bilirubinemia, bilirubinuria, and haemoglobinuria
Fig. 2Photomicrograph showing a large-sized Babesia spp. (B. canis) in canine erythrocytes. Scale-bar: 10 μm
Fig. 3Photomicrograph of a small-sized Babesia spp. (B. gibsoni, arrow) in canine erythrocytes. Scale-bar: 10 μm
Fig. 4Photomicrograph of a small Babesia (B. microti-like sp., arrow) in canine erythrocytes. Scale-bar: 10 μm
Fig. 5Diagnostic algorithm for canine babesiosis
Treatments used for infections with the various species of Babesia
| Species | Drugs | Efficacy | Dosage | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Imidocarb dipropionate | Good | 6.6 mg/kg IM/SC once (can be repeated after 15 days) | [ |
| Doxycycline | Poor | 10 mg/kg/day PO, 30 days | [ | |
|
| Imidocarb dipropionate | Poor | 6.6 mg/kg IM/SC once (can be repeated after 15 days) | [ |
| Azithromycin + Atovaquone | Good to moderate | 10 mg/kg PO SID/10 d + 13.5 mg/kg PO TID/10 days | [ | |
| Azithromycin + Buparvaquone | Good to moderate | 10 mg/kg PO SID +5 mg/kg IM (repeat after 48 h) | [ |
Acaricides with proven preventive efficacy against Babesia spp. transmission by D. reticulatus and R. sanguineus ticks in dogs
| Principle active (Brand name, presentation - company) | Percentage of protection of | Acaricide efficacy against | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Afoxolaner (NexGard®, chewable tablets - MERIAL) | 100 (56 days) | 99 (4 weeks) | [ |
| Fipronil + Permethrin (Frontline Tri-Act®, Spot on - MERIAL) | 94.3 (4 weeks) | 98.3 (28 days) | [ |
| Fluralaner (Bravecto®, chewable tablets - MSD) | 100 (12 weeks) | 99.2 (86 days) | [ |
| Flumethrin + Imidacloprid (Seresto® Collar - BAYER) | 100 (4 weeks) | 96.0 (48 h), 100 (4 days) | [ |
| Percentage of protection of | Acaricide efficacy against | ||
| Flumethrin + Imidacloprid (Seresto® Collar - BAYER) | 100 (1 year) | 99.7 (48 h) | [ |
| Imidacloprid + Permethrin (Advantix®, spot on - BAYER) | 88.3–94.4 % (12 months)a | 95–100 | [ |
aThe molecular diagnosis was Babesia spp. Identification to the species level was not carried out. However, the studies were performed in the south of Italy, so that the species of Babesia infecting dogs was most likely B. vogeli