Prevalence of heartworm infection in healthy cats in the lower peninsula of Michigan

Tina S. Kalkstein Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824.
Present address is SouthPaws Veterinary Referral Center, 6136 Brandon Ave, Springfield, VA 22150.

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 DVM, DACVIM
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Lana Kaiser Present address is Colleges of Nursing & Human Medicine, A110 Life Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824.

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 MD, DVM
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John B. Kaneene Department of Population Medicine Center, College of Veterinary Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824.

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 DVM, MPH, PhD

Abstract

Objective—To determine prevalence of heartworm infection among healthy, client-owned cats in the lower peninsula of Michigan.

Design—Cross-sectional prevalence study.

Animals—1,348 healthy cats examined at private veterinary practices throughout the lower peninsula of Michigan.

Procedure—Sera were tested by use of an ELISAbased antigen test kit to determine infection and 2 commercially available antibody detection kits to determine exposure. A questionnaire was used to collect data to assess risk factors associated with infection.

Results—25 cats had positive results for heartworm antigen, yielding an observed prevalence of 1.9%. Neither antibody test was reliable or provided reproducible results, and neither yielded positive results for more than 20% of the antigen-positive heartworminfected cats. Multivariate regression indicated that cats from southeastern Michigan and cats ≥ 2 years old had a higher risk of infection.

Conclusions and Clinical Relevance—Results indicated that most (80%) heartworm-infected cats in the lower peninsula of Michigan were from the southeastern part of the state, a pattern that closely paralleled the prevalence of heartworm infection in dogs. Therefore, knowledge of the regional prevalence of heartworm infection in dogs may be useful in assessing the risk of infection in cats. Results also suggested that currently available in-clinic heartworm antibody detection kits have limited utility in the diagnosis of heartworm infection in cats. (J Am Vet Med Assoc 2000;217:857–861)

Abstract

Objective—To determine prevalence of heartworm infection among healthy, client-owned cats in the lower peninsula of Michigan.

Design—Cross-sectional prevalence study.

Animals—1,348 healthy cats examined at private veterinary practices throughout the lower peninsula of Michigan.

Procedure—Sera were tested by use of an ELISAbased antigen test kit to determine infection and 2 commercially available antibody detection kits to determine exposure. A questionnaire was used to collect data to assess risk factors associated with infection.

Results—25 cats had positive results for heartworm antigen, yielding an observed prevalence of 1.9%. Neither antibody test was reliable or provided reproducible results, and neither yielded positive results for more than 20% of the antigen-positive heartworminfected cats. Multivariate regression indicated that cats from southeastern Michigan and cats ≥ 2 years old had a higher risk of infection.

Conclusions and Clinical Relevance—Results indicated that most (80%) heartworm-infected cats in the lower peninsula of Michigan were from the southeastern part of the state, a pattern that closely paralleled the prevalence of heartworm infection in dogs. Therefore, knowledge of the regional prevalence of heartworm infection in dogs may be useful in assessing the risk of infection in cats. Results also suggested that currently available in-clinic heartworm antibody detection kits have limited utility in the diagnosis of heartworm infection in cats. (J Am Vet Med Assoc 2000;217:857–861)

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