Abstract
From March to November 2010, a total of 68 samples of blood from 41 hunting and working dogs that never left the Czech Republic were examined. Some dogs were sampled repeatedly. Blood samples were examined by polymerase chain reaction for the presence of DNA of piroplasms with negative results. Specific IgG antibodies against Babesia canis were detected by indirect immunofluorescence test, and five dogs (12.21%) were seropositive. Titres ranged from 50 to 200. One dog was positive in two samplings within 3 months. The highest number of positive samples was taken in June. The results of this study suggest a likely contact of the examined dogs with the parasite; although in 2005, a total of 340 adult unfed Dermacentor reticulatus ticks in 34 pools screened by PCR for babesiae were negative. © National Science Council, Taiwan 2012.
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Konvalinová, J., Rudolf, I., Šikutová, S., Hubálek, Z., Svobodová, V., & Svoboda, M. (2012). Contribution to canine babesiosis in the Czech Republic. Acta Veterinaria Brno, 81(2), 091–095. https://doi.org/10.2754/avb201281020091
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