Canine vector-borne infections of working dogs of the Sri Lanka Air Force, and free roaming, and privately owned dogs
Canine vector-borne infections (CVBIs) are a global health problem. The military working dogs of Sri Lanka die at an early age, and CVBIs have been a leading speculated cause. We examined CVBIs in the working dogs of the Sri Lanka air force (SLAF) and free-roaming dogs (FRDs) and privately owned dog...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2024-10, Vol.14 (1), p.23355-17, Article 23355 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Canine vector-borne infections (CVBIs) are a global health problem. The military working dogs of Sri Lanka die at an early age, and CVBIs have been a leading speculated cause. We examined CVBIs in the working dogs of the Sri Lanka air force (SLAF) and free-roaming dogs (FRDs) and privately owned dogs (PODs) country-wide. Giemsa-stained smears were prepared and conventional PCR-positive DNA was subjected to sequencing and phylogeny. Of the 668 dogs sampled, 212 (31.7%) had one or more CVBIs. The prevalence of infections among the FRDs (40.0%) was significantly higher than SLAF working dogs (30.0%; χ
2
= 10.5216;
p
= 0.0012) and PODs (26.2%; χ
2
= 5.3414,
p
= 0.0208) but not between SLAF dogs and PODs (χ
2
= 1.7655,
p
= 0.1838). Many infected dogs were asymptomatic (57.4%), which was higher among the FRDs. Seven infectious agents were identified:
Babesia gibsoni
,
B. canis, Ehrlichia canis
,
Anaplasma platys
,
Leishmania
sp.,
Hepatozoon canis
, and filaria worms. The most common infection was
B. gibsoni
(13.8%), followed by
E. canis
(9.9%). Three tick species:
Rhipicephalus linneai
,
Rhipicephalus haemaphysaloides
and
Haemophysalis bispinosa
were found infesting the dogs. The SLAF dogs were thoroughly quarantined upon arrival, but the infection prevalence was similar to PODs. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41598-024-71148-1 |