Regenerative response in dogs naturally and experimentally infected with Babesia rossi

Author:

Seejarim Chandini1,Rautenbach Yolandi1ORCID,Hooijberg Emma H.1ORCID,Leisewitz Andrew L.1,Schoeman Johan P.1,Goddard Amelia1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Companion Animal Clinical Studies, Faculty of Veterinary Science University of Pretoria Pretoria South Africa

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe regenerative response following Babesia rossi infection in dogs is mild, despite severe hemolytic anemia.ObjectiveWe aimed to compare the admission absolute reticulocyte count (ARC) and reticulocyte indices in 103 dogs naturally infected with B. rossi with 10 dogs suffering from immune‐mediated hemolytic anemia (IMHA) and 14 healthy control dogs. The regenerative response was also evaluated in five dogs experimentally infected with B. rossi.MethodsThis is a retrospective observational study of records generated on the ADVIA 2120 hematology analyzer.ResultsThe median hematocrits (HCT) of the B. rossi and IMHA groups were significantly lower than the control group (p < .001 for both); however, no differences were seen between the B. rossi and IMHA groups. Compared with the control group, the median ARC was significantly higher in the B. rossi (p = .006) and IMHA (p = .019) groups but significantly lower in the B. rossi group than the IMHA group (p = .041). In the experimentally infected dogs, there was a sudden decrease in the ARC approximately 48 h after the detection of peripheral parasitemia, which was followed by an increase after treatment. Reticulocytes of naturally infected B. rossi dogs were larger, with more variation in cellular volume. The reticulocytes of the experimentally infected dogs decreased in size with decreasing hemoglobin concentrations as the study progressed.ConclusionsThe regenerative response in dogs naturally infected with B. rossi is inadequate, given the severity of the anemia observed, and it might be a result of direct suppressive action by the parasite or host response on the bone marrow.

Funder

South African Agency for Science and Technology Advancement

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Veterinary

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