4.5 Article

Domestic dog health worsens with socio-economic deprivation of their home communities

Journal

ACTA TROPICA
Volume 135, Issue -, Pages 67-74

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2014.03.010

Keywords

Domestic dog; Zoonotic diseases; Health assessment; Poverty-disease; Panama; Wildlife diseases

Funding

  1. UGA Latin American and Caribbean Studies Tinker Summer Travel Award
  2. University of Georgia [1011RX208068 12 GTT]
  3. Gorgas Institute for Health Research
  4. Nagasaki University (Program for Nurturing Global Leaders in Tropical and Emerging Communicable Diseases)

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Dogs play an important role in infectious disease transmission as reservoir hosts of many zoonotic and wildlife pathogens. Nevertheless, unlike wildlife species involved in the life cycle of pathogens, whose health status might be a direct reflection of their fitness and competitive abilities, dog health condition could be sensitive to socio-economic factors impacting the well-being of their owners. Here, we compare several dog health indicators in three rural communities of Panama with different degrees of socioeconomic deprivation. From a total of 78 individuals, we collected blood and fecal samples, and assessed their body condition. With the blood samples, we performed routine hematologic evaluation (complete blood counts) and measured cytokine levels (Interferon-gamma and Interleukin-10) through enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. With the fecal samples we diagnosed helminthiases. Dogs were also serologically tested for exposure to Trypanosoma cruzi and canine distemper virus, and molecular tests were done to assess T. cruzi infection status. We found significant differences between dog health measurements, pathogen prevalence, parasite richness, and economic status of the human communities where the dogs lived. We found dogs that were less healthy, more likely to be infected with zoonotic pathogens, and more likely to be seropositive to canine distemper virus in the communities with lower economic status. This study concludes that isolated communities of lower economic status in Panama may have less healthy dogs that could become major reservoirs in the transmission of diseases to humans and sympatric wildlife. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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