Evaluation of Blood Biochemical Parameters and Ratios in Piroplasmosis-Infected Horses in an Endemic Region
Juan Duaso, Alejandro Perez-Ecija, Ana Navarro, Esther Martínez, Adelaida De Las Heras, Francisco J. Mendoza

TL;DR
This study explores blood biochemical changes in horses infected with equine piroplasmosis to identify potential markers for diagnosis.
Contribution
The study identifies specific biochemical parameters and ratios that could serve as complementary diagnostic tools for equine piroplasmosis.
Findings
EP-infected horses showed increased total and indirect bilirubin, triglycerides, and GLDH concentrations.
Sodium concentrations were decreased in infected horses compared to non-infected ones.
Biochemical profiles could help detect hemolysis, reduced athletic performance, and liver inflammation in EP.
Abstract
Equine piroplasmosis (EP) is a tick-borne disease affecting equids (horses, donkeys, and mules) worldwide. This parasitic disorder has important health and economic impacts on the equid industry. Diagnosis is reached either by direct detection of the parasites (Babesia caballi, Theileria equi, or Theileria haneyi) in the bloodstream (PCR or blood smear) or by indirect methods (serology). However, it is unknown if other simpler and faster techniques, such as a biochemical profile, could help clinicians to identify this disease. In this study we describe biochemical differences between non-infected and EP-infected horses and evaluate the ability of these biochemical parameters and ratios to predict EP status. Equine piroplasmosis (EP), caused by Theileria equi and Babesia caballi, is a worldwide tick-borne disease with severe economic, commercial, and sanitary implications for equids.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVector-borne infectious diseases · Veterinary Equine Medical Research · Helminth infection and control
