| Literature DB >> 34917839 |
Wojciech Zygner1, Anna Rodo2, Olga Gójska-Zygner3, Paweł Górski1, Justyna Bartosik1, Grzegorz Kotomski3,4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The purpose of the study was to investigate post-mortem changes in dogs infected with Babesia canis and to establish the probable cause of death of the affected animals.Entities:
Keywords: Babesia canis; canine babesiosis; cerebral babesiosis; pulmonary oedema; renal congestion
Year: 2021 PMID: 34917839 PMCID: PMC8643085 DOI: 10.2478/jvetres-2021-0036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vet Res ISSN: 2450-7393 Impact factor: 1.744
Results of clinical examination, serum biochemical changes and haematological changes observed in six dogs infected with B. canis during the first visit to the clinic
| Dog No. | Description | Basic serum biochemical changes | Basic haematological changes | Clinical signs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | Border collie, M, 1 y old | ALT 64, AST 206, ALP 153, T. Bil. 1.24, Glu. 97, Creat. 2.1, Urea 204, T. Prot. 63, Alb. 26 | RBC 5.97, Hb 8.76, Ht 0.39, WBC 3.40, Plt 48 | Apathy, anorexia, diarrhoea, dehydration, pale mucosal membranes, normal body temperature, dark brown urine, DD 2 days |
| II | Mixed breed, F, 8 y old | ALT 127, AST 618, ALP 790, T. Bil. 6.25, Glu. 156, Creat. 14.2, Urea 393, T. Prot 54, Alb. 25 | RBC 3.07, Hb 8.53, Ht 0.20, WBC 29.8, Plt 152 | Apathy, anorexia, diarrhoea, vomiting, dehydration, pale and yellow mucosal membranes, normal body temperature, oliguria (yellow urine), DD 3 days |
| III | Mixed breed, M, 4 m old | ALT 46, AST 117, ALP 124, T. Bil. 1,14, Glu. 72, Creat. 3.8, Urea 331, T. Prot. 41, Alb. 20 | RBC 1.54, Hb 2.18, Ht 0.09, WBC 9.14, Plt 7 | Apathy, anorexia, diarrhoea, vomiting, dehydration, pale mucosal membranes, tachycardia, hyperventilation, vocalisation, normal body temperature, oliguria (dark brown urine), DD 1 day |
| IV | St. Bernard, F, 7 y old | ALT 49, AST 273, ALP 119, T. Bil. 0.9, Glu. 195, Creat. 5.1, Urea 264, T. Prot. 58, Alb. 26 | RBC 6.56, Hb 9.56, Ht 0.42, WBC 6.7, Plt 41 | Apathy, anorexia, diarrhoea, epileptic seizures, menace deficit and lack of PLRs in both eyes, tachycardia, hyperventilation, congestion of mucosal membranes, fever (40.2°C), haematuria, DD 2 days |
| V | American Staffordshire terrier, M, 7 y old | ALT 200, AST 103, ALP 1408, T. Bil. 8.7, Glu. 103, Creat. 3.8, Urea 277, T. Prot. 69, Alb. 30, | RBC 4.34, Hb 5.59, Ht 0.30, WBC 11.0, Plt 133 | Apathy, anorexia, vomiting, dehydration, yellow mucosal membranes, fever (39.5°C), oliguria (dark brown urine), DD 3 days |
| VI | Siberian husky, F, 7 m old | ALT 61, AST 116, ALP 198, T. Bil. 1.41, Glu. 105, Creat. 1.0, Urea 39, T. Prot. 55, Alb. 26 | RBC 4.09, Hb 6.16, Ht 0.27, WBC 4.1, Plt 32 | Apathy, anorexia, pale mucosal membranes, fever (40.0°C), dark brown urine, DD 1 day |
M – male; F – female; m – months; y – years; ALT – alanine aminotransferase (reference interval 3–60 U/L); AST – aspartate aminotransferase (reference interval 1–45 U/L); ALP – alkaline phosphatase (reference interval 20–155 U/L); T. Bil. – total bilirubin (reference interval 0.3–0.9 mg/dL); Glu – glucose (reference interval 70–120 mg/dL); Creat. – creatinine (reference interval 0.8–1.7 mg/dL); Urea (reference interval 20–45 mg/dL); T. Prot. – total protein (reference interval 55–75 g/L); Alb. – albumin (reference interval 29–43 g/L); RBC – red blood cells (reference interval 5.5–8.0 T/L); Hb – haemoglobin (reference interval 7.45–11.17 mmol/L); Ht – haematocrit (reference interval 0.37–0.55 L/L); WBC – white blood cells (reference interval 6.0–12.0); Plt – platelets (reference interval 200–580 G/L); DD – duration of the disease (according to the owner of the dog) before the first visit to the clinic; PLRs – pupillary light reflexes
Fig. 1Pulmonary changes in dogs infected with B. canis
A – Foamy exudate in the trachea of dog No. II; B – Pulmonary oedema in dog No. II; C – Pulmonary congestion and foci of emphysema in dog No. IV; D – Microphotograph of pulmonary oedema in dog No. VI, visible oedema fluid filling alveoli and dilatation of blood vessels (haematoxylin and eosin staining)
Fig. 2Cardiac and renal changes in dogs infected with B. canis
A – Hydropericardium observed in dog No. II; B – Necrosis of the myocardium, visible fragmentation of cardiomyocytes and inflammatory infiltration in dog No. VI (haematoxylin and eosin staining); C – Congested right kidney of dog No. IV; D – Congestion of renal cortex and tubular necrosis in dog No. I (haematoxylin and eosin staining)
Fig. 3Changes in the alimentary system in dogs infected with B. canis
A – Congestion and lipid degeneration of the liver with almost solid bile in the gallbladder in dog No. II; B – Microphotograph of liver congestion and lipid degeneration of hepatocytes in dog No. I (haematoxylin and eosin staining); C – Petechiae in the mucosal membrane of duodenum in dog No. IV; D – Congestion of the pancreas in dog No. IV
Fig. 4Changes in the mesenteric lymph nodes and the brain in dogs infected with B. canis
A – Congestion of the mesenteric lymph node in dog No. IV; B – Congestion of the brain and brain meninges in dog No. IV; C – Microphotograph of the brain, visible neuronal degeneration and necrosis, and neuronophagia in dog No. I (haematoxylin and eosin staining); D – Microphotograph of the brain, visible brain oedema and sequestration of B. canis-infected red blood cells in cerebral capillary vessels in dog No. IV (haematoxylin and eosin staining)