Affiliation:
1. Department of Companion Animal and Special Species Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27606
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Historically, disease manifestations in dogs seroreactive to
Ehrlichia canis
antigens by indirect immunofluorescent antibody testing have been attributed to infection with either
E. canis
or
Ehrlichia ewingii
. A 1996 study by Dawson and colleagues provided PCR evidence that healthy dogs from southeastern Virginia could be naturally infected with
Ehrlichia chaffeensis
. This observation stimulated us to determine which
Ehrlichia
spp. infected sick dogs that were referred to our hospital from the same region. Based upon PCR amplification with species-specific primers, sick dogs seroreactive to
E. canis
antigens were determined to be infected with four
Ehrlichia
species:
E. canis
,
E. chaffeensis
,
E. equi
, and
E. ewingii
. Coinfection with three
Ehrlichia
species (
E. canis
,
E. ewingii
, and
E. equi
) was documented for one dog. An additional canine pathogen presumed to be tick transmitted,
Bartonella vinsonii
subsp.
berkhoffii
, was identified in 7 of 12 dogs. Importantly, our results indicate that in naturally infected dogs,
E. chaffeensis
can cause severe disease manifestations that are clinically and serologically indistinguishable from disease manifestations of
E. canis
or
E. ewingii
. In addition, our findings support the efficacy of doxycycline for treatment of
E. canis
,
E. equi
, and
E. ewingii
infections but indicate that, based upon the persistence of
E. chaffeensis
DNA for 1 year following treatment,
E. chaffeensis
infection in dogs may be more refractory to doxycycline treatment. Undetected coinfection with
Bartonella
may also complicate the evaluation of treatment efficacy while resulting in disease manifestations that mimic ehrlichiosis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
239 articles.
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