1. Canine visceral leishmaniasis as a systemic fibrotic disease
- Author
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Marilene Suzan Marques Michalick, Wagner Luiz Tafuri, Lucelia C. Silva, Maria Marta Figueiredo, Washington L. Tafuri, and Rodrigo Soares de Castro
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Spleen ,Kidney ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Dogs ,Fibrosis ,medicine ,Animals ,Dog Diseases ,Leishmania infantum ,Molecular Biology ,Lung ,biology ,Cell Biology ,Leishmania chagasi ,Original Articles ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Visceral leishmaniasis ,Liver ,Cervical lymph nodes ,Leishmaniasis, Visceral ,Histopathology ,Female ,Collagen ,Lymph Nodes ,Brazil - Abstract
We propose that canine visceral leishmaniasis (CVL) is a systemic fibrotic disease, as evidenced by the wide distribution of fibrosis that we have found in the dogs suffering from chronic condition. The inflammatory cells apparently direct fibrosis formation. Twenty-four cases (symptomatic dogs) were identified from a total of one hundred and five cases that had been naturally infected with Leishmania chagasi and had been documented during an epidemiological survey of CVL carried out by the metropolitan area of the municipality of Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil. The histological criterion was intralobular liver fibrosis, as has been described previously in dogs with visceral leishmaniasis. In addition to the findings in the liver, here we describe and quantify conspicuous and systemic deposition of collagen in other organs, including spleen, cervical lymph nodes, lung and kidney of all the infected symptomatic dogs. Thus we report that there is a systematic fibrotic picture in these animals, where inflammatory cells appear to direct fibrosis in all organs that have been studied. Therefore we propose that CVL is a systemic fibrotic disease.
- Published
- 2013