Thelazia callipaeda in Slovakia – From sporadic cases to endemic areas

Spirurid nematode Thelazia callipaeda, transmitted by the fruit fly Phortica variegata, is a causative agent of an ocular parasitic disease called also canine thelaziosis. Dogs, cats, and wild canids are considered the primary definitive hosts for the parasite, but humans may also serve as aberrant...

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Veröffentlicht in:Parasitology international 2022-04, Vol.87, p.102495-102495, Article 102495
Hauptverfasser: Miterpáková, Martina, Trbolová, Alexandra, Hurníková, Zuzana, Balicka, Agnieszka, Čabanová, Viktória, Valentová, Daniela, Lapšanská, Mária, Ármaiová, Nikolett, Pavlačka, Andrej, Stloukal, Eduard
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container_title Parasitology international
container_volume 87
creator Miterpáková, Martina
Trbolová, Alexandra
Hurníková, Zuzana
Balicka, Agnieszka
Čabanová, Viktória
Valentová, Daniela
Lapšanská, Mária
Ármaiová, Nikolett
Pavlačka, Andrej
Stloukal, Eduard
description Spirurid nematode Thelazia callipaeda, transmitted by the fruit fly Phortica variegata, is a causative agent of an ocular parasitic disease called also canine thelaziosis. Dogs, cats, and wild canids are considered the primary definitive hosts for the parasite, but humans may also serve as aberrant definitive hosts. For long decades the geographic range of T. callipaeda was strictly limited to the territory of Asia, but after the year 2000, the parasite began to spread rapidly through Europe. The first autochthonous infections of dogs and foxes in Slovakia were recorded in 2016. In the present study, the results of a whole-area surveillance for canine thelaziosis are reported. Altogether, 142 cases of infection caused by T. callipaeda were diagnosed by veterinarians in dogs between 2016 and the first quarter of 2021, and two cases of feline thelaziosis were recorded. The majority of the dogs showed mild ocular signs manifested by conjunctivitis; 8.5% of them suffered from more serious mucopurulent discharge, and in two dogs corneal ulceration was recorded. The screening revealed increasing trends in the occurrence of canine thelaziosis from both a temporal and spatial point of view and unambiguously confirms the endemic status of T. callipaeda in Slovakia with the prospect of its further expansion.
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete
subjects Animals
Canine thelaziosis
Cat Diseases - epidemiology
Cat Diseases - parasitology
Cats
Central Europe
Dog Diseases - epidemiology
Dog Diseases - parasitology
Dogs
Eye Infections, Parasitic - epidemiology
Eye Infections, Parasitic - parasitology
Eye Infections, Parasitic - veterinary
Female
Male
Oriental eyeworm
Slovakia - epidemiology
Spirurida Infections - epidemiology
Spirurida Infections - parasitology
Spirurida Infections - veterinary
Thelazia callipaeda
Thelazioidea - classification
Thelazioidea - isolation & purification
Zoonoses
title Thelazia callipaeda in Slovakia – From sporadic cases to endemic areas
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