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      Infection of sandflies by a cat naturally infected with Leishmania infantum.

      Veterinary Parasitology
      Animals, Bites and Stings, parasitology, veterinary, Cat Diseases, transmission, Cats, Leishmania infantum, isolation & purification, physiology, Leishmaniasis, Visceral, Psychodidae

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          Abstract

          Despite the recent reports of feline leishmaniosis from Southern Europe, cats are still regarded as unusual Leishmania hosts. A cat found chronically infected with Leishmania was submitted to xenodiagnosis. After being sedated, the animal was exposed to the bite of 100 laboratory-reared Phlebotomus perniciosus in a fine net cage for 90 min. Four out of 19 blood-fed sandflies (21%) showed motile promastigotes at the dissection. Parasites cultured from cat's lymph node and an infected fly were identical at PCR-RFLP genotyping and identified as Leishmania infantum MON-1, the main zymodeme responsible for human and canine leishmaniosis in Southern Europe. This is the first evidence of transmissibility of feline parasites to a proven vector, suggesting that cats may represent an additional domestic reservoir for L. infantum.

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