Canine leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania leishmania infantum in two Labrador retrievers
Date
1992Author
Awadh A. Binhazim
Willie L. Chapman
Jr., Kenneth
S. Latimer
Martha Styles
Karen Comer
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Canine leishmaniasis, a generally fatal parasitic disease, was diagnosed in 2 dogs with a medical
history of foreign travel, lymphadenopathy, emaciation, anorexia, intermittent fever, and cutaneous lesions.
Clinically, hyperproteinemia, proteinuria, azotemia, and glomerulopathy were evident. Isolation of Leishmania
species was done using Schneider’s Drosophila medium. Syrian hamsters were used for infectivity studies. Clear
taxonomic identification was done biochemically by isoenzyme analysis and comparison of zymogram banding
patterns with 6 World Health Organization reference strains. Based on the geographic origin of affected dogs,
clinicopathologic presentation, visceralization with hepatosplenomegaly in hamsters, and isoenzyme analysis,
a diagnosis of Leishmania leishmania infantum was made. This study, representing the first taxonomic identification
of an isolate from canine leishmaniasis, demonstrates the Zoonotic and epidemiologic implications of
this disease.