Clinical-epidemiological profile of the canine population in a shelter, Minas Gerais, Brazil, 2019-2020.

Raisa Abreu Bragança Colocho,Anna Cecília Trolesi Reis Borges Costa,Blenda Araujo Martins Ferreira, Amanda Carvalho Rosado Ferreira,Dircéia Aparecida da Costa Custódio,Carine Rodrigues Pereira,Erika Aparecida Oliveira, Isaac David Pineda Sirias,Sérgio Novais de Melo, Ana Beatriz Barion Souza, Gustavo Ferreira de Brito, Déborah Braga Resende, Camila Lebani Maluf, Frida Isabel Alves de Oliveira, Larissa Alexsandra Felix, Marília Gabriela Dias Chaves,Christian Hirsch, Francisco Duque de Mesquita Neto,Antônio Carlos Cunha Lacreta Junior,Elaine Maria Seles Dorneles

Journal of applied animal welfare science : JAAWS(2023)

引用 0|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
The aim of this study was to analyze the demographic, clinical, and hematological aspects of the population in a dog shelter located in the municipality of Lavras, Brazil. All animals were microchipped and evaluated by veterinarians. Whole blood samples were obtained from 329 dogs in the months of July-August 2019 and from 310 dogs in the months of January-February 2020. Most of the dogs were of mixed breed, received anti-rabies and polyvalent vaccines (100%), were dewormed (100%), and were spayed/neutered (98.59%), with a predominance of adult (86.51%), short-hair (67.51%), normal body condition (65.57%), medium-size (62.57%), and female (62.36%). The main clinical alterations detected were enlarged lymph nodes (38.69%), skin lesions (31.50%), overweight (23.32%), obesity (6.07%), elevated temperature (17.05%), and ear secretion (15.72%). Regarding hematological alterations, thrombocytopenia (36.31%), leukopenia (15.92%), anemia with decreased hemoglobin values (10.60%), hematocrit (9.70%), and red blood cells (5.14%) were observed. Most of the shelter dogs were apparently healthy, but specific measures for nutritional, dermatological, otological and disease management should be implemented once the health changes are verified, as they impact the general state of the population and adoptions.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Epidemiology, veterinary public health, dog population, shelter medicine, Brazil
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要