Abstract

Canine hepatozoonosis caused by Hepatozoon canis is an emerging disease in Europe. Clinical pictures vary from subclinical to life-threatening and non-specific clinical signs are predominantly reported. A 2-month-old female puppy originating from Southern Italy was adopted and moved to Northern Italy. Then, the dog was brought to a local veterinary practice for gastrointestinal signs, migrating lameness and pruritic dermatitis, and then tested positive for Hepatozoon spp. gamonts at the blood smear. After treatment with imidocarb dipropionate and doxycycline, the dog showed an initial clinical improvement. However, gastrointestinal signs recurred, and diffuse superficial pyoderma appeared on the thoracolumbar region, along with fever, lethargy, and weight loss. Eight months from the first onset of clinical signs, the dog was referred to a veterinary clinic and subjected to complete blood count, urine and fecal analysis, along with abdominal ultrasonography, whole-body CT and gastroduodenal endoscopy. Skin biopsies and blood samples were subjected to a PCR-coupled sequencing protocol, which scored both positive for H. canis. Alterations were consistent with a pre-existing cholangiohepatitis and multiple acquired extrahepatic shunts secondary to portal hypertension. The dog was euthanatized due to a clinical worsening two months later. The potential role of H. canis in the systemic disease observed, clinic-pathological findings and epizootiological implications are discussed.

Highlights

  • Hepatozoonosis is an emerging vector borne disease (VBD) of both dogs and cats, caused by different species belonging to the genus Hepatozoon [1,2]

  • The dog was still negative for L. infantum antibodies at IFAT

  • The present case report suggests a potential role of H. canis in a systemic disease in a puppy, adding possible new clinical knowledge on canine hepatozoonosis

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatozoonosis is an emerging vector borne disease (VBD) of both dogs and cats, caused by different species belonging to the genus Hepatozoon [1,2]. Canine hepatozoonosis is caused by Hepatozoon canis that infects dogs worldwide, and Hepatozoon americanum that has been reported, to date, only in the Americas [1,3,4,5]. Dogs are intermediate hosts of Hepatozoon spp. and become infected via the ingestion of infected ticks (definitive hosts) harboring mature oocysts. The micromerozoites released from mature meronts invade the neutrophils and monocytes, where they mature into gamonts. Ticks become infected ingesting gamonts contained in the leukocytes during a blood meal on a parasitaemic vertebrate [1]

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