Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical (Apr 2015)

An atypical Toxoplasma gondii genotype in a rural Brazilian dog co-infected with Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis

  • Rodrigo Costa da Silva,
  • Karen Caffaro,
  • Carolina Lechinski Paula,
  • Rafaela Mastrangelo Risseti,
  • Helio Langoni,
  • Jane Megid,
  • Mariana Serrano Melanchauski,
  • Katiane Lohn Souza,
  • Regina Kiomi Takahira,
  • Vânia Maria de Vasconcelos Machado

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/0037-8682-0284-2014
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 48, no. 2
pp. 224 – 227

Abstract

Read online

Toxoplasmosis and leishmaniasis are two worldwide zoonoses caused by the protozoan parasites Toxoplasma gondii and Leishmania spp., respectively. This report describes the clinical and laboratorial findings of a co-infection with both parasites in a 4-year-old female dog suspected of ehrlichiosis that presented anemia, thrombocytopenia, hypoalbuminemia, hyperglobulinemia, tachyzoite-like structures to the lung imprints, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) results positive for T. gondii (kidney, lung, and liver) and Leishmania spp. Co-infection with Toxoplasma gondii and Leishmania braziliensis was confirmed by sequencing; restriction fragment length polymorphism-polymerase chain reaction (RFLP-PCR) confirmed an atypical T. gondii genotype circulating in dogs that has been reported to cause human congenital toxoplasmosis.

Keywords