| Literature DB >> 31796167 |
Valéria da Costa Oliveira1, Artur Augusto Velho Mendes Junior1, Maíra Cruz de Holanda Cavalcanti1, Maria de Fátima Madeira1, Luiz Cláudio Ferreira1, Fabiano Borges Figueiredo2, Monique Paiva de Campos2, Niara Vanat Nadal3, Nádia Regina Pereira Almosny3, Rodrigo Caldas Menezes4.
Abstract
This article reports the case of a domestic dog naturally coinfected with the nematode Dioctophyme renale and with the protozoan Leishmania infantum. The dog exhibited no clinical signs but had normocytic hypochromic anemia, hyperproteinemia, hyperglobulinemia, hypoalbuminemia, and hematuria. Necropsy revealed eight D. renale specimens in the abdominal cavity and in right kidney whose parenchyma was atrophied. Histopathological analysis showed glomerular atrophy, fibrosis and a marked diffuse pyogranulomatous inflammatory infiltrate in the right kidney. Moderate multifocal granulomatous peritonitis was observed in the greater omentum. Several Dioctophyme renale eggs were present amidst the inflammatory infiltrate of the right kidney and greater omentum. Leishmania infantum parasites were detected in perirenal adipose tissue of the right kidney, greater omentum, spleen, bone marrow, and popliteal lymph node. The high D. renale load and the severe and uncommon histological alterations associated with the eggs of this parasite may have been influenced by coinfection with L. infantum.Entities:
Keywords: Dioctophymatosis; Dogs; Pathology; Visceral leishmaniasis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31796167 DOI: 10.1016/j.vprsr.2019.100351
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Parasitol Reg Stud Reports ISSN: 2405-9390