A preliminary survey of filarial parasites in dogs and cats in Sri Lanka.

Human brugian filariasis has re-emerged in Sri Lanka after a quiescent period of four decades. This study investigated the prevalence of canine and feline filarial parasites in three localities with human sub-periodic brugian filariasis, in order to determine their potential reservoir status. All re...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chandana H Mallawarachchi, Nilmini T G A Chandrasena, Susiji Wickramasinghe, Ranjan Premaratna, Nilmini Y I S Gunawardane, Navoda S M S M Mallawarachchi, Nilanthi R de Silva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6214534?pdf=render
id doaj-61b965871b3d43639d9bc3553164acbe
record_format Article
spelling doaj-61b965871b3d43639d9bc3553164acbe2020-11-25T02:01:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011311e020663310.1371/journal.pone.0206633A preliminary survey of filarial parasites in dogs and cats in Sri Lanka.Chandana H MallawarachchiNilmini T G A ChandrasenaSusiji WickramasingheRanjan PremaratnaNilmini Y I S GunawardaneNavoda S M S M MallawarachchiNilanthi R de SilvaHuman brugian filariasis has re-emerged in Sri Lanka after a quiescent period of four decades. This study investigated the prevalence of canine and feline filarial parasites in three localities with human sub-periodic brugian filariasis, in order to determine their potential reservoir status. All reachable dogs and cats, both stray and domestic, within a 350m radius of an index case of brugian filariasis in three locations (Madampe, Wattala and Weliweriya) were screened for microfilariae using Giemsa stained thick blood smears. A representative sample of canine and feline blood samples positive for Brugia spp. microfilariae by microscopy, from each of the three locations, were further analyzed by PCR with specific primers for internal transcribed spacer region 2 (ITS2) of the ribosomal DNA. A total of 250 dogs and 134 cats were screened. The overall microfilaraemia rates were high among both dogs (68.8%) and cats (47.8%). The prevalence of microfilaraemia was significantly higher among dogs than cats (p<0.05). Two filarial species were identified based on morphology of microfilariae: Dirofilaria (Nochtiella) repens (dogs, 54.4% and cats, 34.3%) and Brugia spp. (dogs, 51.6% and cats, 30.6%). PCR analysis of canine (n = 53) and feline (n = 24) samples elicited bands in the region of 615bp, which confirmed Brugia malayi infection. Co-infection with D.(N.) repens was detected by PCR with an additional band at 484bp, in 36 canine and 17 feline samples. Overall microfilaraemia rates of dogs (81.8%) and cats (75%) in Madampe (rural) were significantly higher than in urbanized Wattala (dogs, 62.4% and cats, 26.0%) (p<0.05). High rates of zoonotic filarial infections strongly implicate dogs and cats as potential reservoirs for human dirofilariasis and brugian filariasis in Sri Lanka.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6214534?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chandana H Mallawarachchi
Nilmini T G A Chandrasena
Susiji Wickramasinghe
Ranjan Premaratna
Nilmini Y I S Gunawardane
Navoda S M S M Mallawarachchi
Nilanthi R de Silva
spellingShingle Chandana H Mallawarachchi
Nilmini T G A Chandrasena
Susiji Wickramasinghe
Ranjan Premaratna
Nilmini Y I S Gunawardane
Navoda S M S M Mallawarachchi
Nilanthi R de Silva
A preliminary survey of filarial parasites in dogs and cats in Sri Lanka.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Chandana H Mallawarachchi
Nilmini T G A Chandrasena
Susiji Wickramasinghe
Ranjan Premaratna
Nilmini Y I S Gunawardane
Navoda S M S M Mallawarachchi
Nilanthi R de Silva
author_sort Chandana H Mallawarachchi
title A preliminary survey of filarial parasites in dogs and cats in Sri Lanka.
title_short A preliminary survey of filarial parasites in dogs and cats in Sri Lanka.
title_full A preliminary survey of filarial parasites in dogs and cats in Sri Lanka.
title_fullStr A preliminary survey of filarial parasites in dogs and cats in Sri Lanka.
title_full_unstemmed A preliminary survey of filarial parasites in dogs and cats in Sri Lanka.
title_sort preliminary survey of filarial parasites in dogs and cats in sri lanka.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Human brugian filariasis has re-emerged in Sri Lanka after a quiescent period of four decades. This study investigated the prevalence of canine and feline filarial parasites in three localities with human sub-periodic brugian filariasis, in order to determine their potential reservoir status. All reachable dogs and cats, both stray and domestic, within a 350m radius of an index case of brugian filariasis in three locations (Madampe, Wattala and Weliweriya) were screened for microfilariae using Giemsa stained thick blood smears. A representative sample of canine and feline blood samples positive for Brugia spp. microfilariae by microscopy, from each of the three locations, were further analyzed by PCR with specific primers for internal transcribed spacer region 2 (ITS2) of the ribosomal DNA. A total of 250 dogs and 134 cats were screened. The overall microfilaraemia rates were high among both dogs (68.8%) and cats (47.8%). The prevalence of microfilaraemia was significantly higher among dogs than cats (p<0.05). Two filarial species were identified based on morphology of microfilariae: Dirofilaria (Nochtiella) repens (dogs, 54.4% and cats, 34.3%) and Brugia spp. (dogs, 51.6% and cats, 30.6%). PCR analysis of canine (n = 53) and feline (n = 24) samples elicited bands in the region of 615bp, which confirmed Brugia malayi infection. Co-infection with D.(N.) repens was detected by PCR with an additional band at 484bp, in 36 canine and 17 feline samples. Overall microfilaraemia rates of dogs (81.8%) and cats (75%) in Madampe (rural) were significantly higher than in urbanized Wattala (dogs, 62.4% and cats, 26.0%) (p<0.05). High rates of zoonotic filarial infections strongly implicate dogs and cats as potential reservoirs for human dirofilariasis and brugian filariasis in Sri Lanka.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6214534?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT chandanahmallawarachchi apreliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT nilminitgachandrasena apreliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT susijiwickramasinghe apreliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT ranjanpremaratna apreliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT nilminiyisgunawardane apreliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT navodasmsmmallawarachchi apreliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT nilanthirdesilva apreliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT chandanahmallawarachchi preliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT nilminitgachandrasena preliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT susijiwickramasinghe preliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT ranjanpremaratna preliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT nilminiyisgunawardane preliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT navodasmsmmallawarachchi preliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
AT nilanthirdesilva preliminarysurveyoffilarialparasitesindogsandcatsinsrilanka
_version_ 1724958456982536192