Leishmaniasis in Dogs

Parasite Infection (Leishmaniasis) in Dogs - Symptoms, Causes, Diagnosis, Treatment, Recovery, Management, Cost

What are Leishmaniasis?

While a tropical holiday with Fido included may sound like a fantastic idea, you may want to think twice before booking his passport. Leishmaniosis is a parasitic disease that thrives in the warm, tropical climates of places like Portugal, Greece, Brazil, and more. It is thought to be contracted through sandflies of the Phlebotomus species.

Humans and dogs can contract this disease, but dogs are the more common receptors. It can be contracted by two or more dogs through sniffing or ingesting, but it is mostly contracted in the womb or through infected blood. Without treatment, your dog can rapidly deteriorate in health and even die.

Canine Leishmaniosis is a parasitic disorder contracted from Leishmania infantum in mostly Mediterranean and South American areas through sand flies. It is also becoming increasingly prevalent in Foxhound breeds. Leishmania infantum is quite a scary experience for any pet and can be deadly without treatment. If you are considering taking your pet on holiday, make sure that you take necessary precautions. Be active if your dog starts showing clinical signs, as time is of the essence.

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Average Cost

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Symptoms of Leishmaniasis in Dogs

Because most cases are developed in the womb, symptoms are not very prevalent. It can take anywhere between three weeks to seven years for clinical symptoms of leishmaniosis to show. If a dog’s immune system is strong, it is likely they will never even show symptoms. However, once the immune system fails, your pet will become more and more sick.

The most important signs to be on the lookout for include:

  • Skin lesions - particularly near the head and pressure points
  • Lymphadenopathy - Swollen lymph nodes
  • Enlarged spleen
  • Weight loss
  • Fever
  • Abnormal nails
  • Epitaxis
  • Renal disease symptoms
  • Anaemia

Renal disease is the signs of serious infection. Once your dog’s health has declined to that point, the prognosis is very poor. If you believe your dog to be a carrier, or even if you catch the symptoms early, it is possible your pet will recover.

Types

There is only one known type of leishmaniosis and that is Leishmania infantum. It is also called visceral leishmaniosis. This disease affects mostly dogs in tropical locations, but it has been increasingly noticed in the Foxhound breeds. No one knows why this happens in this one particular breed, but it is thought because they work in swampy or wooded areas, near other animals that could be carriers. There has also been an endemic in the United States in places such as Oklahoma and other southeastern states.

Causes of Leishmaniasis in Dogs

Leishmaniosis is contracted through sniffing and ingesting, like many other parasitic diseases. The cysts of the parasite enter the body of the carrier through food, soil, feces, or infected water. Once in the body, the parasite slowly completes its lifecycle in the tissues, skin, and bones of the host. The host will then pass the new cysts on through feces, and the cycle begins all over again when a new host picks it up again.

It is also passed on to unborn puppies if the mother is a host. Another possible way of transmission is through eating or ingesting the blood of an infected animal. Usually, a dog will pick it up by only being in a place where the disease is endemic.

Diagnosis of Leishmaniasis in Dogs

Similar to other parasitic diseases, your veterinarian will do a series of tests to diagnose leishmaniosis. There are three effective routes of diagnosing your pet. The first is through samples from smears or biopsies. They will observe the tissue samples taken from your dog to see if the parasite is living there. This can be tricky as there won’t be many organisms present in all places. They call also test bone marrow, skin, or lymph nodes.

The second method is through an antibody test. This test will be done through the ELISA procedure, which is just a way to measure levels of antibodies. If your dog’s antibodies are high, that means it has an infection. In this case, high antibodies mean the presence of leishmaniosis.

The last and most effective and commonly used method is the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test. The PCR test is the best to use because specialists can look directly at your pet’s DNA and see that there is a change to it, therefore indicating a disease. Parasites infecting an animal’s tissues or cells will alter the DNA in certain places, so veterinarians can see the change and know exactly what the disease is.

Treatment of Leishmaniasis in Dogs

There are two options when it comes to treating leishmaniosis. The first is a combination of meglumine antimonite and allopurinol - two intense, anti-parasite medicines. This will be taken every day for 28 days, and then the dog will take only allopurinol for anywhere between 6-12 months.

The second option is miltefosine and allopurinol for 28 days, followed by only allopurinol for another 6-12 months. The prescription will depend on the progressiveness of the disease. The stronger the disease has gotten; the more medicines they will have to take. Pets may also have to take antibiotics, intravenous fluids, and malassezia treatment, which is a treatment for the skin lesions they have.

Also adding to the long list of treatments, pets who are starting to have renal disease or failure may have to have additional medicines to support them through that.

What makes this even more complicated is that because leishmaniosis is usually only found in tropical locations, your veterinarian may have to get a special drug license to order the needed medicines to the United States or Canada.

There is no complete cure for leishmaniosis, however after a year of treatment, your pet may not show symptoms anymore and may be able to stop treatment.

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Recovery of Leishmaniasis in Dogs

If caught in time, most dogs will show improvement within the first month. Symptoms will subside in a few weeks noticeably with the treatment. The worse state your pet is in, the longer it will take to recover.

Your pet will have to go in for regular monitoring check-ups at specific points. They will most likely be at one month after treatment, followed by four, six, and a year. Once your pet has made it a year without symptoms and has had positive results from treatment, you will reduce your visits to once or twice a year. They will also be able to stop taking the medication allopurinol if their body functions are normal.

There is a vaccine in the United Kingdom that, while it doesn’t prevent the contraction of leishmaniosis, it helps reduce the risk of developing the clinical signs of the disease. Other forms of prevention include using sandfly repellant and keeping your pets indoors when sand flies are active. This is usually in the months of May to October and around the times of 7 p.m to 7 a.m

Leishmaniasis Average Cost

From 367 quotes ranging from $3,000 - $18,000

Average Cost

$7,500

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Leishmaniasis Questions and Advice from Veterinary Professionals

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German Shepherd cross Staffie??

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Rosie

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2 - 3 yrs

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0 found this helpful

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0 found this helpful

My pet has the following symptoms:
Initially Had Small Dry 'Lessions' On Tips Of Ears
Hi there. Have had our 38kg, female German Shepherd cross on Allopurinol since she was diagnosed with Leishmaniasis when we adopted her in March 2017. Dosage (900mg/day - 450mg a.m. and 450mg p.m.). She was extremely gentle and passive at the start of her medication but has become increasingly aggressive towards other animals (small dogs that entered our yard) and a cat (that she executed). She then snapped at a handyman that she had before shown friendship too (teeth scratches on his leg, no blood drawn). I have taken her off the Soluric 300mg tablets and over a period of a week she has become her old genteel self; even letting a stray cat that I have been feeding outside the property.come into the yard. She hardly took any notice! They are currently sleeping a foot away from each other on opposite sides of the gate! I am loathe to put her back on the Soluric or Zylafour but also do not want her Leish to progress. Her initial blood test was 1/400 for Leish. Please advise. Have read up on Miltefosine and Meglumine (Glucantime). Many thanks in advance for any suggestions.

July 26, 2017


0 Recommendations

Allopurinol is a treatment for leishmaniasis which may be used alone or together with another medication; there have been reports of aggression and changed behaviour in dogs being treated with allopurinol. Other approaches to treatment usually involve allopurinol being used in combination with another medication (N-methylglucamine antimoniate or miltefosine). Treatment for leishmaniasis is long (more than six months) and may still result in a persistently infected, asymptomatic carrier dog; any change in the treatment regimen should be discussed with your Veterinarian as Rosie is under their duty of care and I cannot prescribe or recommend treatment as I haven’t examined Rosie. Regards Dr Callum Turner DVM

July 26, 2017

Hello Dr Callum Turner. Can you give me your contact info. I need to take your advice. I'll pay of course

April 7, 2018

Xyash D.

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Samoyed

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Lucky

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4 Years

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1 found this helpful

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1 found this helpful

My pet has the following symptoms:
Vomiting
hello, my dog has leishmaniasis. We started Milteforan treatment but he is vomitting and do not eat anything. our vet. gave him serums and anti-emetics but he keep vomitting and do not eat anything. From 21 kgs to 16kgs in 10 days :( do you have any advices for this situation?

July 26, 2017

1 Recommendations

In cases where dogs are vomiting after receiving anti-emetics and there has been an almost 25% decrease in body weight (most probably mainly due to fluid loss) in ten days, I would recommend returning to your Veterinarian and having Lucky placed on intravenous fluids to keep his hydration up during treatment. There are different treatment protocols which may be attempted in dogs, many medications used for the treatment of Leishmaniosis in dogs are not licensed for use in the United States. Allopurinol is commonly used to decrease parasitemia and to keep the dog asymptomatic. Again, I would urge you to seek symptomatic therapy from your Veterinarian to give Lucky the best chance of recovery; in some severe chronic cases euthanasia may need to be considered. Regards Dr Callum Turner DVM

July 26, 2017

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Leishmaniasis Average Cost

From 367 quotes ranging from $3,000 - $18,000

Average Cost

$7,500

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