Publication | Closed Access
Prevalence of Giardia antigen in stool samples from dogs and cats
40
Citations
21
References
2004
Year
Giardia AntigenStool SamplesVeterinary PathologyGastroenterologyVeterinary SciencePathologyFaecal SamplesSmall Animal Internal MedicineVeterinary EpidemiologyVeterinary MicrobiologyVeterinary DiagnosticsGiardia InfectionMedicinePotential Animal ReservoirsEpidemiologyParasitology
SUMMARY A total number of 153 faecal samples (105 from dogs and 48 from cats) were examined for the presence of Giardia infection by a commercially available enzyme immunoassay (ProspecT® Giardia Rapid Assay). Infection rates were significantly (p<0.05) higher in dogs (19.04%) than in cats (4.16%), in female (28%) than in male (10.90%) dogs, and in winter (29.54%) than in the spring/summer period (11.47%). Though not significant, the prevalence of giardiasis was also found to be higher in owned (19.67%) than in refuge dogs (18.18%), in ≤ 3 year-old dogs (33.07%) than in older ones (7.40%), and in symptomatic (37.50%) than in asymptomatic dogs (17.52%). These data demonstrate that Giardia is more widespread than had been previously thought in Italy. It is also concluded that dogs and, to a lesser extent, cats may serve as potential animal reservoirs in urban areas.
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