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First Case of Clinical Cat Aelurostrongylosis in the Brazilian Amazon: Clinical and Molecular Insights.

Wilison da Silva LimaEnny Caroline Ferreira FaragoMillena do Nascimento MesquitaAcácio Duarte PachecoPatrícia Fernandes Nunes da Silva MalavaziHugo Salvador OliveiraSimone MorelliMariasole ColomboAngela Di CesareSoraia Figueiredo de Souza
Published in: Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Aelurostrongylus abstrusus is the most important respiratory parasite infecting domestic cats worldwide. Nevertheless, most records and epizootiological data come from Europe, whilst poor and fragmentary information are available for other regions, including the Americas. The present article describes the first description of cat aelurostrongylosis from Amazonia, Brazil. Eighty-one cats, 13 from a shelter and 68 admitted at the Teaching and Research Unit in Veterinary Medicine (UV) at the Federal University of Acre (UFAC), Brazil, were included in the study. For all cats, three faecal samples from consecutive defecations were examined using the Baermann's technique. Nematode first stage larvae (L1), retrieved in 2/81 (2.5%) samples, were microscopically identified as A. abstrusus and then subjected to a molecular assay able to identify the three most important species of metastrongyloids infecting felids. This test confirmed the A. abstrusus identity in one sample, while the second scored negative. The cat with confirmed aelurostrongylosis showed radiographic changes, i.e., an interstitial pattern, compatible with the infection. The other cat, which scored positive at the Baermann's examination, was apparently healthy at the physical examination and showed no thoracic alterations. The occurrence of A. abstrusus in domestic cats from Brazilian Amazon is herein demonstrated for the first time. Clinical, epizootiological and molecular implications are discussed.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • risk assessment
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  • electronic health record
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  • artificial intelligence
  • social media
  • genetic diversity
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  • medical education
  • trypanosoma cruzi