International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Mar 2022)

A Preliminary Survey for Filarial Parasites among Dogs and Cats in Mahawewa, Puttalam and their Vector Identification

  • S. Nimalrathna,
  • C. Mallwarachchi,
  • T.G.A.N. Chandrasena,
  • N. De Silva,
  • M. Kimber,
  • N.R. De Silva,
  • H. Harischandra

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 116
pp. S122 – S123

Abstract

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Purpose: This study investigated the prevalence of zoonotic filarial parasites within the canine and feline population in Mahawewa, Puttalam, and their vectors based on a brugian filariasis positive human case reported to the Anti-filariasis Campaign in January 2021. Methods & Materials: All reachable dogs and cats, both stray and domestic, within a 500m radius of the index human case of brugian filariasis were screened for microfilaria using Giemsa stained thick blood smears prepared from capillary blood, obtained from an ear-lobe prick. Mosquito collection was done using a dog-baited trap, two window traps and a B.G. Sentinel trap from the same study site and identified using morphological keys. The head and the thorax regions of randomly selected mosquito specimens were dissected for morphological identification of larval filaria parasites via microscopy. Results: A total of nine dogs and three cats were surveyed, of which seven dogs and one cat had filarial infections. All the infected animals harbored B.malayi microfilariae, while four dogs and one cat were co-infected with Dirofilaria repens and two dogs with an unidentified species. A total of 119 mosquitoes were caught and identified by taxonomic keys using a dog-baited trap, two window traps and a B.G. Sentinel trap from the study site. Dissection of heads and thoraces of randomly selected 12 Mansonia annulifera, 18 Mansonia indiana 20 Mansonia uniformis and 8 Culex spp. revealed filarial larvae in M.annulifera (n=4, 33.33%), M. indiana (n=14, 77.78%), M. uniformis (n=10, 50.00%) and Culex spp.(n=5, 62.5%) via microscopy. Conclusion: M.indiana was incriminated as a potential vector of filarial parasites for the first time in Sri Lanka. Preliminary evidence generated indicate a high prevalence of B.malayi and D.repens among dogs and cats in Mahawewa, Puttalam with an abundance of mosquito vectors mostly of Mansonia and Culex spp. This warrants further studies with a larger sample size and molecular identification of the filarial larvae within mosquito and animal samples, especially as re-emergence of brugian filariasis in humans is being reported after four decades of quiescence, and a zoonotic brugian parasite has been detected over the recent past, raising a concern from a one health perspective.