A 5-year retrospective study of canine and feline patients referred to an isolation unit for infectious diseases.

IF 1.3 Q2 VETERINARY SCIENCES
Veterinary Record Open Pub Date : 2021-04-05 eCollection Date: 2021-12-01 DOI:10.1002/vro2.5
Catarina Paulo, Inês Machado, Helena Carvalho, Joana Gomes, Ana Deodato Mota, Luís Tavares, Virgílio Almeida, Solange Gil
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Background: Referral of cases is becoming more and more frequent in companion animal practice. The Infectious Diseases Isolation Unit (IDIU) admits first opinion, second opinion and referred patients with a confirmed infectious disease (ID) or a clinically suspected ID that is awaiting laboratory diagnosis. The primary aims of this study were to describe the annual number and characteristics of patients referred to the IDIU and identify the most frequent IDs in referred dogs and cats. A secondary aim was to investigate possible differences in the length of the hospitalisation and the clinical outcome among referred cases and those admitted to the IDIU after first and second opinion appointments.

Methods: A retrospective study was carried out on patients hospitalised at the unit over 5 years from 9th October 2013 to 31st December 2018.

Results: The study population consisted of 365 dogs and 515 cats to give a total of 880 patients hospitalised at the IDIU from October 2013 to December 2018. Among the 96 referred dogs, parvovirosis (37.7%) and leptospirosis (31.1%) were the most frequent IDs. Feline upper respiratory tract infection (38.2%) and feline leukaemia virus infections (36.4%) were the main causes in the 80 referred cats. Worrying noncompliance rates of dog (51.0%) and cat (52.5%) vaccination schedules were identified. The analysis of the length of hospitalisation in the three groups of patients was not statistically different. In both animal species there were statistically significant higher clinical discharge rates on the first opinion patients' group in comparison to referred patients and the second opinion group.

Conclusions: Parvovirosis and leptospirosis in dogs and upper respiratory disease and feline leukaemia virus infection in cats were the most common diagnoses for patients admitted to the IDIU, reinforcing the need for accurate vaccination. Discharge rates results pinpoint the need for timely accurate reference.

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一项5年回顾性研究犬和猫的病人转到隔离单位的传染病。
背景:在伴侣动物实践中,病例转诊越来越频繁。传染病隔离科(IDIU)接受第一意见、第二意见和转诊的确诊传染病或临床疑似传染病患者,这些患者正在等待实验室诊断。本研究的主要目的是描述每年引用IDIU的患者数量和特征,并确定引用的狗和猫中最常见的IDs。第二个目的是调查转诊病例和经第一次和第二次意见预约后入住IDIU的病例在住院时间和临床结果方面可能存在的差异。方法:对2013年10月9日至2018年12月31日在该单位住院5年以上的患者进行回顾性研究。结果:研究人群包括365只狗和515只猫,从2013年10月到2018年12月,共有880名患者在IDIU住院。96只犬中以细小病毒病(37.7%)和钩端螺旋体病(31.1%)最为常见。猫上呼吸道感染(38.2%)和猫白血病病毒感染(36.4%)是80只猫的主要病因。犬类(51.0%)和猫类(52.5%)疫苗接种计划的不符合率令人担忧。三组患者住院时间分析无统计学差异。在两种动物中,第一意见组的临床出院率均高于转诊患者和第二意见组。结论:犬细小病毒病和钩端螺旋体病以及上呼吸道疾病和猫白血病病毒感染是IDIU入院患者最常见的诊断,加强了准确接种疫苗的必要性。排出率结果需要及时准确的参考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Veterinary Record Open
Veterinary Record Open VETERINARY SCIENCES-
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
19 weeks
期刊介绍: Veterinary Record Open is a journal dedicated to publishing specialist veterinary research across a range of topic areas including those of a more niche and specialist nature to that considered in the weekly Vet Record. Research from all disciplines of veterinary interest will be considered. It is an Open Access journal of the British Veterinary Association.
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