1 / 20

Dirofilaria immitis

Dirofilaria immitis. Kristi Bjerke & Heather Lee. Taxonomy. CLASS: SECERNENTEA SUBCLASS: SPIRURIA ORDER: SPIRURIDA SUPERFAMILY: FILARIOIDEA FAMILY: ONCHOCERCIDAE 
 Scientific name - Dirofilaria immitis 
Common name - Dog heartworm. Hosts.

jayme
Télécharger la présentation

Dirofilaria immitis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dirofilaria immitis Kristi Bjerke & Heather Lee

  2. Taxonomy CLASS: SECERNENTEA • SUBCLASS: SPIRURIA • ORDER: SPIRURIDA • SUPERFAMILY: FILARIOIDEA • FAMILY: ONCHOCERCIDAE 
 • Scientific name - Dirofilaria immitis • 
Common name - Dog heartworm

  3. Hosts • Definitive Host: dogs, foxes, wolves, coyotes, cats, ferrets, sea lions • Intermediate Host: Over 70 species of mosquitoes

  4. Geographic Distribution • Worldwide • Most common in mild and warm climates

  5. Morphology • Adults are long, white, thread-like worms • Females 25 to 30cm long • Males 12 to 16 cm long with spirally coiled tail

  6. Morphology • give live birth and the baby worms are called Microfilariae • Microfilariae • Sheathless • 218 to 329µm long • have a long pointed tail

  7. Life Cycle

  8. Life Cycle • A dog infected by microfilariae is bitten by a mosquito • If the microfilariae is not picked up by a mosquito after 2 years, they die of “old age.” • Microfilariae can be transmitted across the placenta. • Puppies will not develop adult heartworms because the microfilariae didn’t go through the intermediate

  9. Life Cycle • Inside the mosquito, the microfilariae develop to L2’s and finally to L3’s. • The L3 is the infective stage for dogs. • Takes a few weeks • Temperature dependant • Minimum of 57 ºF is required

  10. Life Cycle • The L3 is deposited in mosquito saliva next to the bite and then migrate into the body. • The average mosquito can only transmit a maximum of 10 infective larvae at one time • The L3 larvae then live in the dogs skin where they develop into an L4 stage. • They then live in the subcutaneous tissues and muscle for 3 months before they finally molt into an adult.

  11. Life Cycle • Adults migrate to the right side of the heart and into the pulmonary arteries and lungs where they mate and produce microfilariae. • The overall maturation and migration process until mating takes approximately 5-7 months • Adult worms can live in the dog for up to 5 years

  12. Pathogenesis of the Heart • Heavy infections(over 25 worms for a 40 lb dog) • worms begin to back up into the right ventricle • less blood pumped. • Over 50 worms the ventricle is full and the atrium begins to contain worms. • Over 100 worms the entire right side of the heart is filled • phenomenon is called "Caval Syndrome" and most dogs do not survive it.

  13. Canine Symptoms • Cough, exercise intolerance • dyspnea (difficulty breathing) • abnormal lung sounds • hepatomegaly (enlargement of the liver) • syncope (temporary loss of consciousness due to poor blood flow to the brain) • ascites (fluid accumulation in the abdominal cavity) • abnormal heart sounds • death

  14. Feline Symptoms • Non-specific generic signs of illness • Vomiting intermittently • Lethargy • Lack of appetite • Weight loss • Coughing • Asthma-like signs • Gagging • Difficult or rapid breathing • The early signs (when worms are carried to the pulmonary arteries) are often misdiagnosed as asthma or allergic bronchitis • Actually Heartworm Associated Respiratory Disease (HARD)

  15. Heartworm in Cats vs. Dogs

  16. Diagnosis • Blood Tests • Filter test to look for microfilariae • Doesn’t work well for small infections • Antigen test screens for pieces of adult heartworm skin in the blood • Only works for female worms • Need at least 3 for it to be detected • Newer tests test for antibodies • X-rays • Enlargement of lobes of lungs or right side of heart

  17. Treatment • Adulticide • Melarsomine dihydrochloride (Immiticide®) • Intramuscular injection into lumbar muscles • Complications include thrombosis (clogging) of pulmonary arteries due to dead worms • No current treatment for cats • Microfilaricide • macrocyclic lactone (ML) anthelminthics, i.e.,milbemycin oxime, selamectin, moxidectin and ivermectin • Commonly used in heartworm preventative

  18. Control/Prevention • Can be given as • Monthly Tablets • Chewables • Topicals • Ivermectin • Heartgard, Heartgard Plus, Tri-Heart, Iverheart Plus • Milbemycin oxime • Interceptor, Sentinel • Selamectin • Revolution • Moxidectin • Advantage Multi

  19. http://www.heartwormsociety.org/quiz.asp

More Related