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Canine Leishmaniasis: Update on Epidemiology, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Prevention

Manuel Morales‐Yuste, Joaquina Martín‐Sánchez, Victoriano Corpas‐López

2022Veterinary Sciences127 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, causing canine leishmaniasis, an incurable multisystemic disease that leads to death in symptomatic dogs, when not treated. This parasite causes visceral, cutaneous, and mucosal leishmaniasis in people in the Mediterranean Basin, North Africa, South America, and West Asia. This disease is mostly unknown by veterinarians outside the endemic areas, but the disease is expanding in the Northern Hemisphere due to travel and climate change. New methodologies to study the epidemiology of the disease have found new hosts of leishmaniasis and drawn a completely new picture of the parasite biological cycle. Canine leishmaniasis diagnosis has evolved over the years through the analysis of new samples using novel molecular techniques. Given the neglected nature of leishmaniasis, progress in drug discovery is slow, and the few drugs that reach clinical stages in humans are unlikely to be commercialised for dogs, but several approaches have been developed to support chemotherapy. New-generation vaccines developed during the last decade are now widely used, along with novel prevention strategies. The implications of the epidemiology, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of canine leishmaniasis are fundamental to public health.

Topics & Concepts

Leishmania infantumLeishmaniasisCanine leishmaniasisEpidemiologyDiseaseVisceral leishmaniasisMedicineLeishmaniaPublic healthEnvironmental healthImmunologyPathologyParasite hostingComputer scienceWorld Wide WebResearch on Leishmaniasis StudiesTrypanosoma species research and implications
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