Abstract

Infected dogs are considered the main domestic animal reservoirs for Leishmania infantum parasite. Infectiousness to competent phlebotomine vectors has been associated with many factors, the main being the severity of the disease exhibited by infected dogs. This study examines the relationship between different clinical parameters and the infectiousness to colonized Phlebotomus perniciosus sand flies having a blood meal on dogs. Data obtained in the present study come from an untreated group of Leishmania sick dogs submitted to xenodiagnosis for the evaluation of a spot on insecticide solution. Seventeen dogs were diagnosed as affected by leishmaniasis through clinical examination, immunofluorescence antibody test (IFAT) serology, and loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP). The disease severity (clinical score) was staged by using a numeric value derived from eight clinical and parasitological parameters. Xenodiagnosis was performed on caged dogs exposed for 1.5 h to sand-fly bites. The following parameters related to sand flies were examined: blood feeding (% of blood engorged females), promastigote detection (% of promastigote-positive sand flies), promastigote burden, and the promastigote stage maturation (potential transmissibility rate). Statistical relationship between the clinical score and entomological parameters was investigated, as well as the possible correlation between each clinical and laboratory parameters and sand fly infection/infectivity. The severity of clinical score may influence the blood feeding by, and the probability of promastigote detection in, sand flies; skin lesions seem to be the main factor that influences the rate of blood feeding. Promastigote burden is related to IFAT titer, skin lesions, and clinical score. All entomological parameters are strongly related among them. This study confirms that both P. perniciosus infection and infectivity are influenced by a dog's clinical condition.

Highlights

  • Phlebotomine sand flies (Diptera: Psychodidae) are the biological vectors of Leishmania parasites (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatidae), which are transmitted to vertebrate hosts by the bite of blood-sucking females

  • The severity of the clinical picture is often characterized by a large variety of skin lesions which has been associated with the ability to transmit L. infantum back to the sand fly population [10,11,12]

  • All dogs exhibited clinical signs related to canine leishmaniasis (CanL), such as lymph node enlargement, cutaneous lesions, weight loss, muscular hypotrophy, or ocular involvement

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Summary

Introduction

Phlebotomine sand flies (Diptera: Psychodidae) are the biological vectors of Leishmania parasites (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatidae), which are transmitted to vertebrate hosts by the bite of blood-sucking females. Canine leishmaniasis (CanL) is a progressing disease characterized by a broad spectrum of signs, ranging from asymptomatic/subclinical infection—frequently characterized by negative Leishmania serology and general healthy status—to severe, fatal disease condition. The latter is associated to elevated humoral T-helper 2 unbalanced response, leading to diffuse immune complexes deposition in several organs [9]. The study examines the relationship of different clinical and laboratory parameters, with the infectiousness to colonized P. perniciosus sand flies having a blood meal on diseased dogs

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