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- Title
Clinicopathological findings in 41 dogs (2008‐2018) naturally infected with Ehrlichia ewingii.
- Authors
Qurollo, Barbara A.; Buch, Jesse; Chandrashekar, Ramaswamy; Beall, Melissa J.; Breitschwerdt, Edward B.; Yancey, Caroline B.; Caudill, Alexander H.; Comyn, Alaire
- Abstract
Background: Ehrlichia ewingii is the most seroprevalent Ehrlichia‐infecting dogs in the southern and mid‐western United States. Fever, lameness, and polyarthritis are commonly reported findings in dogs naturally infected with E. ewingii. Objectives: To evaluate clinicopathologic findings in a population of dogs naturally infected with E. ewingii. Animals: Forty‐one dogs PCR positive for E. ewingii and PCR negative for other targeted vector‐borne organisms. Methods: Retrospective study. Clinical and clinicopathologic data including physical examination findings, CBC, serum biochemistry, urinalysis (UA), symmetric dimethylarginine (SDMA), and vector‐borne disease diagnostic results were reviewed. Results: Frequent clinical diagnoses other than ehrlichiosis (28/41; 68.3%) were renal disease (7/41; 17.1%) and immune‐mediated hemolytic anemia (IMHA) (6/41; 14.6%). The most frequent physical examination finding was joint pain (14/41; 34.1%). Prominent hematologic and biochemical abnormalities included abnormal lymphocyte counts (22/36; 61.1%); neutrophilia (21/37; 56.8%); increased alkaline phosphatase (20/35; 57.1%) and alanine transaminase (14/35; 40%) activities; and increased SDMA concentration (11/34; 32.4%). Urinalysis abnormalities included proteinuria (20/27; 74%), most with inactive sediments (16/20; 80%). Dogs were seroreactive by Ehrlichia canis immunofluorescence assay (IFA; 17/39; 43.6%) and Ehrlichia ELISA (34/41; 82.9%). Seroreactivity by IFA for other vector‐borne pathogens included Bartonella (1/39; 2.6%), Rickettsia rickettsii (spotted‐fever group rickettsiae) (12/39; 30.8%), and Borrelia burgdorferi by ELISA (1/41; 2.4%). Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Renal disease, IMHA, proteinuria, neutrophilia, abnormal lymphocytes, and increased liver enzyme activities were common in this group of E. ewingii‐infected dogs. Studies are needed to determine if E. ewingii contributes to comorbidities or is a precipitating factor in clinical syndromes in persistently infected dogs.
- Subjects
EHRLICHIA; SEROPREVALENCE; DOG diseases; URINALYSIS; POLYMERASE chain reaction; EHRLICHIOSIS
- Publication
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 2019, Vol 33, Issue 2, p618
- ISSN
0891-6640
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/jvim.15354