Ehrlichia canis: Is It a Pathogen for Humans and Other Primates?
Valentina Virginia Ebani

TL;DR
This paper reviews whether Ehrlichia canis, a bacterium that causes disease in dogs, can also infect and cause illness in humans and other primates.
Contribution
The paper highlights the potential zoonotic risk of Ehrlichia canis and the need for improved diagnostic methods and awareness.
Findings
Ehrlichia canis may cause symptoms in humans similar to those caused by Ehrlichia chaffeensis.
Non-human primates appear susceptible to E. canis, but disease causation is unclear.
Current diagnostic methods often fail to distinguish E. canis from other ehrlichial species.
Abstract
Ehrlichioses and anaplasmosis are among the most commonly reported tick-borne diseases in humans and some animal species. Ehrlichia canis is the causative agent of canine monocytic ehrlichiosis; it primarily affects dogs and is usually transmitted by Rhipicephalus sanguineus ticks. Some reports suggest that this bacterium is a zoonotic pathogen capable of causing clinical symptoms consistent with human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis caused by Ehrlichia chaffeensis. Non-human primates seem to be susceptible to E. canis-infection, although it is not clear whether the bacterium can cause disease in these mammals. The number of cases of E. canis infections in human beings and other primates could be underestimated, mainly because inappropriate laboratory diagnoses are often carried out. Serological tests do not distinguish infection by E. canis from those due to other ehrlichial species;…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVector-borne infectious diseases · Rabies epidemiology and control · Bartonella species infections research
