Novel molecular diagnostic (PCR) diagnosis and outcome of intestinal Echinococcus multilocularis in a dog from western Canada

Author:

Evason Michelle D.1,Jenkins Emily J.2,Kolapo Temitope U.2,Mitchell Kelly D.1,Leutenegger Christian M.1,Peregrine Andrew S.3

Affiliation:

1. Antech Diagnostics Inc, Fountain Valley, CA

2. Department of Veterinary Microbiology, Western College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada

3. Department of Pathobiology, Ontario Veterinary College, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, Canada

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVE To describe the novel PCR diagnosis and outcome of intestinal Echinococcus multilocularis in a dog. ANIMAL A 13-month-old female intact dog with naturally occurring intestinal E multilocularis. CLINICAL PRESENTATION, PROGRESSION, AND PROCEDURES The 13-month-old dog initially presented with a reduced appetite and weight loss and then developed hematochezia. The clinical history included a lack of endoparasite preventive care (fecal testing, deworming), exposure to coyotes, fox, sheep, and rodents and the dog had intermittently been fed a raw food diet. Physical examination revealed a thin dog, with a 2/9 body condition score, that was otherwise clinically unremarkable. A fecal sample was submitted for screening for gastrointestinal parasites as part of an infectious disease assessment. The fecal PCR test reported detection of E multilocularis. This result was sequenced as the European haplotype E3/E4. Centrifugal flotation (same sample) did not detect taeniid eggs. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME The dog was treated with metronidazole, maropitant, and milbemycin oxime/praziquantel. Clinical improvement was noted within 48 hours. No DNA of E multilocularis was detected in a fecal sample collected approximately 10 days after treatment. The dog’s owner was advised to provide monthly deworming (praziquantel) for all dogs on the property and to contact their human health-care provider due to potential zoonotic exposure risk. CLINICAL RELEVANCE Increasing detection of E multilocularis is occurring in dogs in Canada and the US. Alveolar echinococcosis can cause severe disease in dogs and humans. Fecal PCR detection and surveillance may alert practitioners to canine intestinal cases and allow dogs to serve as sentinels for human exposure risk.

Publisher

American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)

Subject

General Veterinary

Reference5 articles.

1. Emergence of Ancylostoma caninum parasites with the benzimidazole resistance F167Y polymorphism in the US dog population;Leutenegger CM,2023

2. Identification of taeniid eggs in the faeces from carnivores based on multiplex PCR using targets in mitochondrial DNA;Trachsel D,2007

3. Canine alveolar echinococcosis: an emerging and costly introduced problem in North America;Kolapo TU,2023

4. Alveolar hydatid disease (Echinococcus multilocularis) in the liver of a Canadian dog in British Columbia, a newly endemic region;Peregrine AS,2012

5. Diagnosis, treatment, and outcome of four dogs with alveolar echinococcosis in the northwestern Unites States;Williams LBA,2023

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