GI nematodes: Toxocara canis Flashcards
Features of T. canis
- Eggs have thick, pitted shell
- Infective stage larvae are sm (200 microns)
- Adults are large (20cm)
What are the 4 routes of infection?
- Direct - oral
- Transplacental
- Transmammary
- Via parenteric host (not true intermediate host)
What does the outcome of infection depend on?
The age and immune status of the animal
- < 3 months old, migrate to liver then lung and then developinto adults in the SI
- > 3 months olds, larvae migrate to tissues
Describe the life cycle of T. canis in dog < 3 months old
- Egg containing L3 stage is ingested by dog
- L3 hatches in SI and migrates via liver to lungs
- L3 migrates to SI via trachea
- L3-L4, adult develops in SI
- Adults in SI release eggs that excreted into environment in faeces
What type of migration do the larvae show?
Heptatracheal migration
Describe the lifecyle in bitches < 3 months, giving rise to transplacental migration
- L3 in egg is ingested
- L3 hatches in SI
- L3 migrates to tissues and arrests
- L3 activated about 3 weeks pre-partum
- L3 migrates from bitches tissue to foetal lung
- L3 migrates to the SI via trachea
- L3 develops into L4, adult form found in SI
- 2 weeks after birth puppy will have patent infection and will shed eggs in faeces
Give 5 features of arrested larval development
- Arrested L3 form is hypobiotic (resistant to commonly used anthelmintics)
- Can survive in tissues for whole of bitches life
- Can be reactivated when immunity is lowered during pregnancy
- Reactivation could be due to hormonal influence
What feature of female worms makes T. canis highly infectious?
Very fecund (highly fertile) and can produce thousands of eggs per day.
State clinical signs seen during the migratory phase
- Coughing
- Increased respiratory rate
- Pneumonia in heavy infections
State clinical signs seen during the enteral phase
- Pot bellied puppies
2. Reduced growth rates in puppies
What are treament options for T. canis?
- Anthelmintics to prevent environmental contamination