Pointer Veterinary Clinic

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home

Leishmania

This is an often fatal disease. Leishmaniasis is a zoonotic parasitic disease transmitted through the bites of the phlebotomine sand flies and is the third most important disease worldwide. Your dog may not be affected in countries such as the UK and Scandinavia, but in Spain you need to protect your dog against this disease.  

How is it spread?

The disease is carried from dog to dog by a microscopic parasite called Leishmania infantum, which is spread by sand fly bites. Dogs can be bitten up to 100 times an hour during the sand fly season, which begins in May and ends in September.

When an infected sand fly bites a dog, parasites are deposited on the skin. A tiny skin lesion - called a chancre - appears at the site of the bite, usually in the muzzle or the ear. The parasite then invades the dog’s cells, spreads into the internal organs and may begin to damage the immune system.

Signs and symptoms

Signs of the disease are highly variable and in some cases, may take several years to manifest. Affected dogs may have a fever, show signs of hair loss (particularly around the eyes), lose weight and develop skin sores and nail disease. Unfortunately, over time, many organs may become involved leading to problems like anaemia, arthritis in many joints, eye and kidney disease.

Prevention and control

Treatment may be complex and often non curative, so prevention is best. You can help protect your dog from sand flies for the whole of the sand fly season, by using a collar containing deltamethrin, called Scalibor, which also controls infestation with ticks for five to six months. Scalibor collars are available from Reception at the Pointer Clinic.

Information provided by Intervet

 
Frontpage Slideshow (version 2.0.0) - Copyright © 2006-2008 by JoomlaWorks