Title: Blood and Tissue Protozoa of Dogs and Cats
1Blood and Tissue Protozoa of Dogs and Cats
2Babesia canis
- B. canis is endemic in southern Florida, sporadic
elsewhere, especially in the southern states
Large, pleomorphic organisms in RBC are typical
classic paired pyriform bodies (below) are rare
in this species. - B. gibsoni is rarely seen in the USA and is
found in dogs from Asian enzootic areas small,
singular annular bodies in RBC are typical
3Babesia canis
- Pups, young dogs are more susceptible than
adults, especially kennels - Major strain differences in pathogenicity
- Rhipicephalus sanguineus transmits
transovarially, transstadially - Incubation period 10 days-3 weeks transmission
possible by ticks, transplacentally or by
transfusion - Often concurrent with Ehrlichia canis
A three week old puppy presented with anemia,
icterus after several littermates died in a
greyhound kennel
- Signs and pathogenesis are referable to
regenerative hemolytic anemia. In clinical cases,
aggregates of parasitized RBC-fibrin ? sludging
of capillary beds ? tissue anoxia, vascular
damage, especially brain, heart, kidneys,
intestines? acidosis, DIC ? shock and death
4Clinical signs
Acute Disease Fever, anemia, icterus,
splenomegaly, hemoglobinuria, azotemia, acidosis,
low number of organisms (parasites) are found, even in the acute phase.
Parasitemia is transient at 3-4 days, reappears
at 10 days and peaks at 3 weeks. Chronic
Disease Immunity (premunition) leads to a
balance of the parasite and host immunity
organisms are rare in blood in chronic
infections stress may lead to recrudescence and
sporadic episodes of hemolytic crisis (eg.
Pregnancy may activate infection ? Transplacental
transmission to pups). Adult dogs and previously
affected dogs are typically asymptomatic, chronic
carriers.
5Diagnosis of Babesia
- Spleen, liver impression smears of a littermate
that had died. RBC with organisms become sticky
and are taken out of circulation. Note multiple
parasites in some RBCs.
- Organisms were found in tip of thin smears of capillary blood. Giemsa
stain is best - Coombs test is
- Serology IFA of 140 is diagnostic of
current or previous clinical disease
6Kennel History Babesia outbreak
- The 2 affected litters were born in this kennel
housing 23 adult dogs Numerous brown dog ticks
(R sanguineus) of all stages (larvae, nymphs,
adults) were found
- Serologic testing by IFA of dogs in outside runs
revealed about ½ had titers 140 Bitches of
affected litters had titers 11000
Typical greyhound kennel management
7Treatment and Control
- Imidocarb diproprionate (Imazole) is treatment of
choice It is also effective against Ehrlichia
canis, which is often found concurrently with
Babesia and is also transmitted by R sanguineus.
Diminazene aceturate (Ganaseg, Berenil) are also
effective Phenamidine isothionate, trypan blue
are older, less effective drugs. No accepted
effective treatment exists for B gibsoni. - Tick control is essential to break the two-month
tick life cycle. Weekly dip of all dogs, once
per month kennel spray insecticide resistance
common - Dip and quarantine all incoming dogs for 3
weeks eliminate serologically positive carriers.
- A vaccine is available in Europe, elsewhere.
8Trypanosoma cruzi
- T. cruzi causes Chagas disease, a major human
disease in South America. - Reduviid bugs reside in cracks, crevices,
especially in mud brick houses, emerge and feed
on mucous membranes at night
- Circulating trypomastigotes in blood meal develop
in reduviid vectors (kissing bug, assassin bugs)
and infect host by stercorarian transmission,
by organisms deposited by defecation on bite
wound. Tranfusions can transmit.
9Distribution of T. cruzi in the USA
- In the USA, Chagas disease is a sylvatic disease
circulating in raccoons,other wild mammallian
hosts and can incidentally infect and cause
clinical disease in young, rural dogs
(The acute phase, with circulating organisms,
coincides with
invasion, multiplication and rupture of cells,
especially in cardiac muscles. Acute
myocarditis, with ventricular tachycardia, right
heart failure, ascites, hepatomegaly, anemia, and
sudden death may occur, /- neurological signs
the intermediate phase, asymptomatic with no
parasitemia for years and the Chronic phase, with
dilatational cardiomyopathy (in dogs and human)
and death due to congestive heart failure or
arrhythmias Megacolon may occur in man (Charles
Darwin died of this). Chronic disease
pathogenesis is obscure.
10T cruzi amastigotes in cardiac tissues
- Circulating trypomastigotes occur concurrently
in hosts with amastigotes, especially in the
cardiac musculature - Low numbers of trypomastigotes may be found in
thin blood smears Giemsa stained thick smears
more accurate, especially if examine buffy coat
of a microhematocrit tube
- Organisms seen 3-6 day after infection, peak at
2-3 weeks in acute phase - Xenodiagnosis by feeding reduviid bug on host,
hold 20-40 days, examine - Culture possible by LIT medium, cell culture
inoculation with blood - Serology is offered by CDC for diagnosis of
veterinary cases - Rx, Control No effective drug supportive
care spray houses for vectors
11Leishmaniasis
- A major veterinary and public health disease in
Latin America, Africa, Asia and the Mediteranean
basin where 20-40 of dogs and 1-2 of children
nare infected Dogs are the main reservoir in the
old world - A small focus occurs in the Southwest USA
military family dogs from endemic zones - Recent recognition of significant disease in
Foxhounds in the Eastern USA epidemiology is
obscure, possibly transmitted via dog bites - Visceral leishmaniasis typically causes
cutaneous lesions in dogs, with alopecia,
depigmentation, hyperkeratosis, in addition to
lymphadenopathy, deep visceral organ involvements.
12Leishmania amastigotes, impression smear
- Amastigotes, round organisms with a nucleus and
diagnostic dark cylindrical kinetoplast,
circulate in the blood intracellular in monocytes - In the visceral form, amastigotes nests occur
in phagocytes in major vascular organs rich in RE
cells there is a 3-7 month incubation period
after a transient cutaneous lesion (L. donovani,
L. infantum) - In cutaneous forms (L. tropica complex) lesions
confined to skin, rodents are common reservoirs
- Finding amastigotes by biopsy of skin, lymph
nodes, spleen or liver is diagnositic
13Sandfly intermediate hosts
- Phlebotomus spp (sandflies) are intermediate
hosts. Infection by ingestion of organism in
monocytes. - Sandflies are found in protected, internally
humid foci such as rodent burrows, mainly in arid
climates. Transmission is seasonal and tends to
be focal where favorable sandfly environments
occur -
- TREATMENT of leishmaniasis Megumine
antimoniate, Na stibogluconate SID for 3 weeks
14Cytauxzoon felis
- Causes a rapidly fatal disease in cats after day illness. Signs referable to occlusion of
vasculature by schizonts in MN phagocyte lining
of all organs, especially lungs - Sporadic in rural cats in South, Southcentral
USA Tick vector (Dermacentor, Ixodes?) with a
bobcat reservoir suspected. - There is both a tissue and RBC phase of the life
cycle. Merozoites parasitize 1-4 of circulatiing
RBC 1-3 days prior to death. Signs are
depression, anorhexia, dyspnea, icterus, anemia,
terminal 103-107 F febrile period. Dx via
organism in Giemsa or Wrights stained RBC, bone
marrow or impression smears. -
- Rx Saved 6 of 500 cats by supportive care,
parvaquone, 10-30mg/kg SID, 3d
15Hepatozoon canis
- Hepatozoon occurs sporadically in dogs, usually
- Infection is by ingestion of R. sanquineus in
which sporogony occurs
- Intermittent fever, stiffness of muscles and
periosteal inflammation due to release of
merozoites from tissue schizonts Periosteal bone
proliferation in proximal long bones visible by
radiography? Diagnostic
- In the dog, schizogony occurs in phagocytic
cells of the RE cells of major organs, myocardium
and skeletal muscles, producing merozoites which
produce gametocytes that circulate in the blood
in neutrophils, monocytes for tick vector. Dx
Find gametocytes in blood smears or schizont by
muscle biopsy. Rx
ImidocarbTetracycline?, Diminazene?, Primaquine?
may be tried