Chagas Disease in Dogs from Endemic Areas of Costa Rica

Dogs with the presumptive diagnosis of Chagas disease are commonly sent to our School of Veterinary Medicine by independent veterinarians. This prompted us to evaluate the prevalence of canine trypanosomiasis in some villages of the Central Valley of Costa Rica. A total of 54 dogs (21 males and 33 females) from five rural villages, with ages between 3 months and 10 years old, were bled and submitted to three serological tests: indirect immunofluorescence, indirect hemagglutination and ELISA. Among all animals, 15 (27.7%) revealed antibodies (6 pure bred and 9 mongrels) and in 3 of them the parasite was also demonstrated by xenodiagnosis. All positive animals except 1, and 9 negative animals (control group) were examined by X-rays and electrocardiography, revealing different degrees of cardiomegaly and ECG alteration, consistent with Chagas disease pathology in one dog (SA-11) of the infected ones. Examination of 50 inhabitants living in the houses where dogs and Triatoma dimidiata were found, yielded negative serological reactions. This was assumed to support the hypothesis that dogs are commonly infected by the oral route, a more effective means of infection compared with the vector transmission mechanism that occurs in humans.

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Main Authors: Montenegro,Victor M, Jiménez,Maurico, Dias,JC Pinto, Zeledón,Rodrigo
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde 2002
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0074-02762002000400006
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spelling oai:scielo:S0074-027620020004000062002-07-11Chagas Disease in Dogs from Endemic Areas of Costa RicaMontenegro,Victor MJiménez,MauricoDias,JC PintoZeledón,Rodrigo Chagas disease Trypanosoma cruzi dogs Costa Rica Dogs with the presumptive diagnosis of Chagas disease are commonly sent to our School of Veterinary Medicine by independent veterinarians. This prompted us to evaluate the prevalence of canine trypanosomiasis in some villages of the Central Valley of Costa Rica. A total of 54 dogs (21 males and 33 females) from five rural villages, with ages between 3 months and 10 years old, were bled and submitted to three serological tests: indirect immunofluorescence, indirect hemagglutination and ELISA. Among all animals, 15 (27.7%) revealed antibodies (6 pure bred and 9 mongrels) and in 3 of them the parasite was also demonstrated by xenodiagnosis. All positive animals except 1, and 9 negative animals (control group) were examined by X-rays and electrocardiography, revealing different degrees of cardiomegaly and ECG alteration, consistent with Chagas disease pathology in one dog (SA-11) of the infected ones. Examination of 50 inhabitants living in the houses where dogs and Triatoma dimidiata were found, yielded negative serological reactions. This was assumed to support the hypothesis that dogs are commonly infected by the oral route, a more effective means of infection compared with the vector transmission mechanism that occurs in humans.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInstituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da SaúdeMemórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz v.97 n.4 20022002-06-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0074-02762002000400006en10.1590/S0074-02762002000400006
institution SCIELO
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Montenegro,Victor M
Jiménez,Maurico
Dias,JC Pinto
Zeledón,Rodrigo
spellingShingle Montenegro,Victor M
Jiménez,Maurico
Dias,JC Pinto
Zeledón,Rodrigo
Chagas Disease in Dogs from Endemic Areas of Costa Rica
author_facet Montenegro,Victor M
Jiménez,Maurico
Dias,JC Pinto
Zeledón,Rodrigo
author_sort Montenegro,Victor M
title Chagas Disease in Dogs from Endemic Areas of Costa Rica
title_short Chagas Disease in Dogs from Endemic Areas of Costa Rica
title_full Chagas Disease in Dogs from Endemic Areas of Costa Rica
title_fullStr Chagas Disease in Dogs from Endemic Areas of Costa Rica
title_full_unstemmed Chagas Disease in Dogs from Endemic Areas of Costa Rica
title_sort chagas disease in dogs from endemic areas of costa rica
description Dogs with the presumptive diagnosis of Chagas disease are commonly sent to our School of Veterinary Medicine by independent veterinarians. This prompted us to evaluate the prevalence of canine trypanosomiasis in some villages of the Central Valley of Costa Rica. A total of 54 dogs (21 males and 33 females) from five rural villages, with ages between 3 months and 10 years old, were bled and submitted to three serological tests: indirect immunofluorescence, indirect hemagglutination and ELISA. Among all animals, 15 (27.7%) revealed antibodies (6 pure bred and 9 mongrels) and in 3 of them the parasite was also demonstrated by xenodiagnosis. All positive animals except 1, and 9 negative animals (control group) were examined by X-rays and electrocardiography, revealing different degrees of cardiomegaly and ECG alteration, consistent with Chagas disease pathology in one dog (SA-11) of the infected ones. Examination of 50 inhabitants living in the houses where dogs and Triatoma dimidiata were found, yielded negative serological reactions. This was assumed to support the hypothesis that dogs are commonly infected by the oral route, a more effective means of infection compared with the vector transmission mechanism that occurs in humans.
publisher Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde
publishDate 2002
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0074-02762002000400006
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