Parvo-Giardia IC
Rapid test for the detection of canine Parvovirus and Giardia lamblia antigens
Parvo / Giardia IC is an immunochromatographic test for the detection of canine Parvovirus (CPV) and Giardia lamblia antigens in canine faeces samples.
PARVO
Parvo is a highly contagious viral disease that can be potentially fatal, especially in unvaccinated puppies.
The responsible virus is classified as Canine Parvovirus Type 2 (CPV 2), to distinguish it from another Parvovirus (CPV 1) found in dog faeces, without pathological significance. It is a very resistant virus in the environment (it can also withstand up to 1 year) and to the action of detergents and disinfectants.
The virus is excreted in the faeces and multiplies in the digestive tract and bone marrow. Penetrated into the body orally, after an incubation period of 3-8 days, the virus initially replicates in the oropharyngeal lymphatic tissues, from which it spreads haematogenously to all tissues. Subsequently, the virus localizes to the lymphohematous tissues of the bone marrow and to the lymphoid tissues of the jejunum and ileum, where it causes respectively neutropenia, lymphopenia, destruction of the intestinal villi with necrosis of the epithelium and hemorrhagic diarrhea. As a result of immunosuppression, infected animals have frequent secondary bacterial infections (from Escherichia coli, Salmonella, Campylobacter and clostridia) which aggravate the pathogenetic picture. From the 3rd day post-infection the animal becomes a virus eliminator.
Infection can occur by direct contact with the faeces of infected dogs or indirectly through exposure to the environment or to contaminated objects, such as litter boxes or bowls.
Parvoviral infection can affect dogs of any age, although most cases occur in young puppies between the ages of 6 weeks and 6 months. Unvaccinated or partially vaccinated animals have a considerably higher risk of developing parvo.
Some breeds are described as predisposed to canine parvovirus infection, such as Dobermann Pinscher, Rottweiler, English Springer Spaniel, German Shepherd, American Pit Bull Terrier and Dachshund. These breeds, once infected, also tend to develop more severe symptoms.
Toy Poodles and Cocker Spaniels appear to have a reduced risk of canine parvovirus infection. Puppies whose mothers have been regularly vaccinated are also affected less frequently and less severely by parvo. This is because vaccination from the mother increases the levels of maternal antibodies circulating in young puppies. The spread of canine parvo is worldwide. The first episodes of canine parvovirus sustained by CPV were observed in 1978 in America, the disease spread rapidly throughout the world, affecting wild canids and domestic dogs, soon becoming an endemic disease.
GIARDIA
Giardiasis is caused by Giardia, a unicellular parasite belonging to the flagellated protozoa (Giardia intestinalis, or duodenalis or lamblia), it can affect dogs, cats, other animals and even humans indifferently, causing a disease also known as giardiasis (in human part of the traveller’s diarrhea complex).
Normally the transmission of Giardia occurs via the fecal-oral route through the ingestion of contaminated food, water or soil. The life cycle is direct and does not require intermediate hosts.
Giardia in faeces occurs in two forms: the mobile, flagellate, or the form it takes in the intestine; the cystic form, most common to see in stool tests. In the cystic form, giardia is able to survive for several months in the environment, especially where there is a lot of water and humidity. Once the cysts enter the body orally, the cysts mature in the intestine and become trophozoites. Here they reproduce and can begin to produce cysts that are released with the feces.
The spread of Giardia is about 10% in dogs kept in the family, from 36 to 50% in puppies and up to 100% in kennels.
The prevalence in cats ranges from 1.4 to 11%.
PARVO
The course of parvo is variable from subject to subject even within the same litter. There are basically two clinical forms: one gastrointestinal (of variable severity) and one cardiac; however, a sub-clinical form is also recognized.
Gastrointestinal form:
After a short incubation period, the following appears:
- vomiting and diarrhea with blood
- anorexia
- depression of the sensory
- dehydration rapidly sets in and, sometimes, even mild hyperthermia
- leukopenia (<3000 cells / mm3) with marked lymphopenia.
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The course is variable and a slow recovery or a worsening of the general conditions with death of the affected subjects can be observed.
Heart shape:
Clinical evolution is rapid and 2-4 weeks old subjects die with the signs of acute myocarditis.
Subclinical form:
It is perhaps the relatively most frequent form, characterized by:
- mild sensory depression
- anorexia
- mild diarrhea
- modest leukopenia / lymphopenia.
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The development of the sub-clinical form, sometimes asymptomatic, is closely correlated with the degree of immunity of the animal at the time of infection. Obviously, this is a partial immunity that does not prevent the replication and excretion of the virus. This clinical form takes on a different epidemiological importance depending on the type of life of the animal. In a puppy living in a family environment, the infection will have a limited epidemiological impact; on the contrary, the same situation projected inside a breeding / kennel takes on a completely different implication, as the infected animal eliminates the virus with the feces and can transmit the infection to other subjects.
GIARDIA
Most infections in which cysts pass in the stool are asymptomatic. However, sometimes the symptoms can become manifest, especially in puppies and kittens, in elderly animals, in debilitated animals, in those suffering from other diseases (for example cats with FIV and FeLV), in those with multiple intestinal worms. The main symptoms are:
- diarrhea (acute, liquid, manifesting as a single very strong discharge or with multiple and repeated discharges)
- slimming
- mucous and foul-smelling stools, sometimes with blood streaks
- sometimes lethargy in cats
- decreased appetite
- stunted growth.