Comparison of diagnostic methods for laboratory diagnosis of the zoonotic tapeworm Dipylidium caninum in cats

IF 2 2区 农林科学 Q2 PARASITOLOGY Veterinary parasitology Pub Date : 2024-07-25 DOI:10.1016/j.vetpar.2024.110274
Simone Morelli , Angela Di Cesare , Donato Traversa , Mariasole Colombo , Barbara Paoletti , Agnese Ghietti , Melissa Beall , Kristen Davenport , Jesse Buch , Raffaella Iorio , Erica Marchiori , Antonio Frangipane di Regalbono , Anastasia Diakou
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Abstract

The tapeworm Dipylidium caninum is the most widely distributed cestode infecting dogs, cats, and sometimes humans, worldwide. The diagnosis of the infection caused by D. caninum is achieved via the visualization of proglottids in feces or with traditional microscopic tests, but both lack sensitivity. The present study has evaluated and compared the diagnostic performance of a PCR protocol on different feline biological samples to detect D. caninum. A sample of feces, a Scotch tape test from the perianal area, and a rectal swab were collected from a total of 100 privately owned cats from Italy and Greece. All fecal samples were subjected to macroscopic examination and to floatation. Based on the results of the above tests the cats were divided in three groups, i.e. (i) cats positive for D. caninum (regardless of positivity for other endoparasites (Group A; n = 50 cats), (ii) cats negative for D. caninum but infected by other helminths (Group B; n = 25 cats), and (iii) cats negative for intestinal endoparasites (Group C; n = 25 cats). For each sample, the DNA was extracted from feces, floatation supernatant, Scotch tape test and rectal swabs and subjected to PCR. For 33 cats from Group A, at least one sample type scored positive at PCR. Of these, all were PCR-positive in the floatation aliquot, while nine and one cats were positive by PCR on feces and Scotch tape test, respectively. Swabs were negative by PCR for all the cats. None of the samples from cats of Groups B and C was positive by any PCR. Sequences obtained from amplicons generated from samples of cats enrolled in Italy had 99–100 % identity with the recently described D. caninum feline genotype. The data presented here suggest that PCR could be a useful tool for diagnosing D. caninum infections, under certain circumstances, e.g. when proglottids are unidentified, unseen or overlooked, even though it has limitations, e.g. false negative results due to fecal PCR inhibitors, uneven distribution of parasitic elements, or to intermittent proglottid and/or egg shedding. Thus, it may not be, currently, the best diagnostic choice for dipylidiosis.

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比较实验室诊断猫体内人畜共患绦虫--犬双鞭毛虫的方法
犬双鞭毛虫(Dipylidium caninum)是分布最广的绦虫,在全球范围内感染狗、猫,有时也感染人类。通过粪便中的原虫或传统的显微镜检测可以诊断犬双鞭毛虫感染,但这两种方法都缺乏灵敏度。本研究评估并比较了在不同猫科动物生物样本中检测犬白喉杆菌的 PCR 方案的诊断性能。研究人员从意大利和希腊的 100 只私人饲养的猫身上采集了粪便样本、肛周苏格兰胶带检测样本和直肠拭子样本。所有粪便样本都进行了宏观检查和漂浮试验。根据上述检测结果,猫被分为三组,即:(i) 犬丹毒阳性的猫(无论其他内寄生虫是否阳性(A 组;n = 50 只猫);(ii) 犬丹毒阴性但感染其他蠕虫的猫(B 组;n = 25 只猫);(iii) 肠道内寄生虫阴性的猫(C 组;n = 25 只猫)。每个样本都从粪便、浮游上清、苏格兰胶带测试和直肠拭子中提取 DNA,并进行 PCR 检测。在 A 组的 33 只猫中,至少有一种样本类型在 PCR 中呈阳性。其中,所有浮游等分样品的 PCR 结果均为阳性,而粪便和苏格兰胶带测试的 PCR 结果分别为阳性的猫有 9 只和 1 只。所有猫咪的拭子PCR结果均为阴性。B 组和 C 组猫的样本在任何 PCR 检测中均未呈阳性。从在意大利登记的猫样本中产生的扩增子中获得的序列与最近描述的 D. caninum 猫基因型具有 99-100 % 的一致性。本文提供的数据表明,在某些情况下,例如当原虫未被识别、未被发现或被忽视时,PCR 是诊断犬原虫感染的有用工具,尽管它也有局限性,例如由于粪便 PCR 抑制剂、寄生虫元素分布不均或间歇性原虫和/或虫卵脱落而导致的假阴性结果。因此,该方法目前可能不是诊断双鞭毛虫病的最佳选择。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Veterinary parasitology
Veterinary parasitology 农林科学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
126
审稿时长
36 days
期刊介绍: The journal Veterinary Parasitology has an open access mirror journal,Veterinary Parasitology: X, sharing the same aims and scope, editorial team, submission system and rigorous peer review. This journal is concerned with those aspects of helminthology, protozoology and entomology which are of interest to animal health investigators, veterinary practitioners and others with a special interest in parasitology. Papers of the highest quality dealing with all aspects of disease prevention, pathology, treatment, epidemiology, and control of parasites in all domesticated animals, fall within the scope of the journal. Papers of geographically limited (local) interest which are not of interest to an international audience will not be accepted. Authors who submit papers based on local data will need to indicate why their paper is relevant to a broader readership. Parasitological studies on laboratory animals fall within the scope of the journal only if they provide a reasonably close model of a disease of domestic animals. Additionally the journal will consider papers relating to wildlife species where they may act as disease reservoirs to domestic animals, or as a zoonotic reservoir. Case studies considered to be unique or of specific interest to the journal, will also be considered on occasions at the Editors'' discretion. Papers dealing exclusively with the taxonomy of parasites do not fall within the scope of the journal.
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