Research Info

Home /Canine microfilaraemia in ...
Title Canine microfilaraemia in some regions of Iran
Type JournalPaper
Keywords Acanthocheilonema reconditum, Dirofilaria immitis, Haemoparasites, Iran, PCR, Zoonosis
Abstract Background: Dirofilaria immitis and Dirofilaria repens are vector‐borne zoonotic parasites which affect mainly dogs and humans worldwide. In Iran, information about the distribution of those nematodes is scant in several regions. Therefore, we investigated the prevalence of these filarial parasites in stray dogs from five Iranian provinces where no information about these parasites is available. Methods: Blood samples were collected from 344 stray dogs in five provinces of Iran (i.e. Mazandaran, Gilan, Esfahan, Qazvin and Loresan). The presence of microfilariae was assessed using direct smear, modified Knott’s test, molecular detection of filarial DNA (cox1 gene) and Wolbachia endosymbiont of parasitic nematodes (ftsZ gene) by conventional PCR (cPCR). All of the PCR products were sequenced and phylogenetic analysis was performed. Results: In total, 75 dogs (21.8%) were found to be positive for D. immitis by cPCR. Infection was detected in all prov‐ inces, with the highest prevalence in Gilan province (22/28; 78.6%). Acanthocheilonema reconditum was diagnosed in five dogs (1.4%) from three provinces (i.e. Esfahan, Mazandaran, Gilan). Two dogs were infected with both parasites and three were only infected with A. reconditum. Dirofilaria repens infection was not found in the examined popula‐ tion. Representative sequences of the D. immitis cox1 gene from dogs from the northern provinces (Mazandaran, Gilan, Qazvin) were grouped together and distinctly separate from the ones from western and central provinces (Lorestan and Esfahan), suggesting that different nematode populations are present in the country. Conclusion: The data reported herein fill existing gaps in knowledge about canine filarial infection in two Iranian provinces and record the highest prevalence of D. immitis ever reported in the country (i.e. 78.6%). A geographical review of the literature about Dirofilaria spp. and A. reconditum infections in dogs and humans has also been sum‐ marized, indicating that
Researchers Domenico Otranto (Not In First Six Researchers), Marcos Antonio Bezerra-Santos (Not In First Six Researchers), ALIREZA SAZMAND (Not In First Six Researchers), Fatemeh Jalousian (Not In First Six Researchers), Shahram Jamshidi (Not In First Six Researchers), Minoo Soltani (Not In First Six Researchers), Ahdieh Eslamian (Not In First Six Researchers), Mohammad Bagher Ahoo (Fifth Researcher), Hassan Nayebzadeh (Fourth Researcher), Mohammad Ramezani (Third Researcher), Fateme Manshori-Ghaishghorshagh (Second Researcher), Seyed Hossein Hosseini (First Researcher)