Clinical signs
Dogs usually don't exhibit signs of infections. However, some puppies and adult dogs may show signs of infection. Puppies that get infected before or shortly after birth are often severely affected and might not survive. Symptoms in puppies usually involve nerve and muscle abnormalities. Young puppies often experience partial paralysis of their legs, particularly the hind legs. In adult dogs, neurological signs, skin inflammation with sores, liver inflammation, pneumonia, and heart inflammation may occur.
Young dogs (under 6 months old) experience more frequent and severe infections. Clinical signs are similar to toxoplasmosis, with more pronounced neurological and muscular abnormalities.
Diagnosis
Most animals infected with N. caninum show no clinical signs, so laboratory tests are required for diagnosis. Commonly used tests include:
- Histopathology and immunohistochemistry- highly recommended in cases of reproductive problems such as abortion and fetal lesions
- Serology tests- indirect fluorescent antibody test (IFAT), Neospora-agglutination test, and ELISA for detection of antibody levels
- Molecular diagnosis- real-time PCR to detect the organisms or differentiate them from other protozoa
Treatment
Neosporosis treatment is usually challenging and may only provide temporary, partial, or no relief. It often requires extended periods of treatment. Dogs with neurological symptoms typically have a poor prognosis, and treatment is most effective in the early stages before muscular contracture sets in.
Most protocols for treating neosporosis aim to control clinical manifestations rather than achieve parasitological cure. Popular protocols include:
- Clindamycin (7.5–15 mg/kg, PO or SC, q8h) for 4–8 weeks
- Trimethoprim–sulfonamide (15–20 mg/kg, PO, q12h) for 4–8 weeks
- Pyrimethamine–sulfonamide (5–30 mg/kg, PO, q12 h) for 4–8 weeks.
- Ponazuril (20 mg/kg, PO, q24h) for 4 weeks
Note
Bioguard’s Qmini PCR can detect Neospora caninum DNA in 90 minutes at your clinics using feces or EDTA-blood as samples.