51. Use of a commercial serologic test for Angiostrongylus vasorum for the detection of A. chabaudi in wildcats and A. daskalovi in badgers
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Nikola Pantchev, Angela Monica Ionică, Ioana Adriana Matei, Cristian Domşa, Vasile Cozma, Andrei Daniel Mihalca, Georgiana Deak, Gianluca D’Amico, Călin Mircea Gherman, and Aikaterini Alexandra Daskalaki
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary medicine ,Angiostrongylus vasorum ,Antibodies, Helminth ,Severe disease ,Zoology ,Cross Reactions ,Pulmonary Artery ,Meles ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Serology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Felis ,Mustelidae ,Animals ,Serologic Tests ,Angiostrongylus ,Feces ,Strongylida Infections ,Molecular identification ,General Veterinary ,biology ,General Medicine ,030108 mycology & parasitology ,biology.organism_classification ,Parasitology - Abstract
Three species of the genus Angiostrongylus are known to infect European carnivores: A. vasorum (mainly in canids but also in other carnivores), A. chabaudi (in felids) and A. daskalovi (in mustelids). A. vasorum is responsible for clinically severe disease in domestic dogs, most commonly diagnosed based on fecal examination and serological detection of circulating antigens. Considering the poorly known host range and the challenging larval differentiation in the feces between the three species of Angiostrongylus infecting European carnivores, our aim was to evaluate the cross-reactivity of A. chabaudi and A. daskalovi with A. vasorum using a commercial serologic test developed for domestic dogs. Badgers (Meles meles) (n = 10) and wildcats (Felis silvestris) (n = 8) were examined between 2015 and 2016 by full parasitological necropsy with subsequent morphological and molecular identification of nematodes and by serology, using IDEXX Angio Detect™ tests. Five out of the ten badgers and two out of the eight wildcats were harboring nematodes in the pulmonary arteries. All nematodes were identified morphologically as A. daskalovi in badgers and A. chabaudi in wildcats, respectively. Serological examination of the plasma samples revealed the positivity of the same animals as found in necropsy. None of the animals negative at necropsy was positive at serology. The 100% correlation between the necropsy results and the serologic positivity to IDEXX Angio Detect™ in badgers infected with A. daskalovi and wildcats infected with A. chabaudi suggest that these rapid tests are able to identify circulating antigens of all species of Angiostrongylus found in European carnivores: A. vasorum, A. daskalovi and A. chabaudi. The possibility for future in-clinic use of this test in domestic cats should be further investigated.
- Published
- 2017
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