Top dogs can catch things too!  Our canine breeding & dog show panel checks for 8 pathogens potentially transmissible at dog shows and when breeding.

 Neuro symptoms getting on your nerves? Try our canine neurological panel - 6 neurological pathogens from 1 CSF sample; or our feline neurological panel - 5 neurological pathogens from 1 CSF sample.

Respiratory symptoms got you breathless? Try our canine respiratory PCR panel - we test for 8 canine respiratory pathogens from throat, nasal and eye swabs.

...or maybe you need our feline respiratory PCR panel -- 6 feline respiratory pathogens from throat, nasal and eye swabs.

Diarrhea got you on the run? Try our canine diarrhea PCR panel -- 8 major diarrheagenic agents from 1 fecal specimen...
...OR our 9-pathogen feline diarrhea PCR panel.

Not feeling sanguine about bloodborne pathogens in cats? Try our feline bloodborne PCR panel -- 4 major bloodborne pathogens from 1 blood sample.

Ticks bugging you? Try our tickborne disease PCR panel -- 7 major tickborne pathogens from 1 blood sample.

Just plain sick and tired? Try our canine anemia PCR panel or our feline anemia PCR panel -- detect and differentiate multiple anemia pathogens from 1 blood sample.

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Zoologix performs canine and feline PCR tests for...

Anaplasma phagocytophilum

Anaplasma platys

Ancylostoma duodenale

Aspergillus species

Aspergillus fumigatus

Babesia

Bartonella

Baylisascaris procyonis

Bordetella bronchiseptica

Borrelia burgdorferi

Brucella canis

Campylobacter

Canine adenovirus type 1

Canine adenovirus type 2

Canine circovirus

Canine enteric coronavirus (CCV1)

Canine distemper

Canine herpesvirus

Canine papillomavirus

Canine parainfluenza virus

Canine parvovirus

Canine pneumovirus

Canine respiratory coronavirus (CCV2)

Chagas disease

Chikungunya virus

Chlamydophila psittaci

Clostridium species

Coccidia

Cryptococcus

Cryptosporidium

Cytauxzoon felis

Demodex gatoi mites

E. coli

Ehrlichia

Entamoeba

Fading kitten syndrome

Feline calicivirus

Feline distemper

Feline enteric coronavirus

Feline foamy virus

Feline herpesvirus type 1

Feline immunodeficiency virus

Feline infectious anemia

Feline infectious peritonitis

Feline leukemia

Feline panleukopenia

Feline papillomavirus

Feline parvovirus

Feline pneunomitis

Feline rhinotracheitis virus

Feline sarcoma virus

Feline syncytial virus

Francisella tularensis

Giardia

Group G strep

Haemobartonella canis

Haemobartonella felis

Helicobacter

Hepatozoon

Influenza type A

Lawsonia intracellularis

Leishmania

Leptospira

Lyme disease

Mange in cats

Microsporum

MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staph aureus)

Mycoplasma canis

Mycoplasma cynos

Mycoplasma felis

Mycoplasma haemocanis

Mycoplasma haemofelis

Mycoplasma haemominutum

Mycoplasma turicensis

Neorickettsia helmintheca

Neospora caninum

Pasteurella multocida

Pneumocystis carinii

Rabies

RD114

Reovirus screen

Rickettsia screen

Ringworm

Salmonella

Salmon poisoning disease

Sarcocystis neurona

Streptococcus, Group G

Streptococcus pneumoniae

Streptococcus pyogenes

Streptococcus zooepidemicus

Strongyloides stercoralis (threadworm)

Tetanus

Toxocara

Toxoplasma gondii

Trichomonas/
Tritrichomonas

Trichophyton

Trypanosoma cruzi

Tularemia

West Nile virus

Yersinia pestis

Yersinia pseudotuberculosis


Strongyloides stercoralis PCR test for dogs and cats

dog and cat assay data sheet

Strongyloides stercoralis (threadworm) PCR test

Test code: X0058 - Ultrasensitive qualitative detection of Strongyloides stercoralis by real time PCR

Strongyloides stercoralis is a parasitic roundworm commonly known as threadworm. This parasite infects humans and causes the disease known as strongyloidiasis. An estimated 30–100 million people worldwide, mainly in tropical and subtropical regions, are infected by this parasite. The parasite is found in contaminated soil and typically enters the body through bare skin, such as the feet, before migrating to the lungs and intestines, where it matures and reproduces.

The parasite is zoonotic, meaning transmission between animals and humans is possible. Dogs can be infected, but clinical disease is often mild or subclinical, and so is more common than recognized due to underdiagnosis. Cats can be experimentally infected, but natural infections are rare and not well-documented. Infections have been detected in non-human primates, with fatal cases reported in some species.

Larvae in feces develop into infectious forms in warm, moist soil. Humans get infected by walking barefoot on contaminated ground, where larvae penetrate the skin. Larvae then travel via the bloodstream to the lungs. Larvae are coughed up and swallowed, then enter the intestine, where they mature into adult worms.

The life cycle of S. stercoralis is unique among soil-transmitted helminths because it can include an auto-infective phase: the parasite can reproduce within a host without needing to exit the body. This can lead to chronic infections lasting decades.

In immunocompromised individuals, such as those on constant corticosteroid treatment and HIV- or HTLV-1-infected individuals, this parasite can cause hyperinfection syndrome, a potentially fatal condition where larvae proliferate massively. However, in most people infections are asymptomatic. When symptoms occur, they may include abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, skin rashes, and respiratory issues (such as coughing or wheezing). In severe cases, weight loss, malnutrition, or disseminated infection leading to sepsis can occur.

Preventing the infection relies on avoiding contact with contaminated soil by wearing suitable shoes in endemic areas, improving sanitation, and conducting deworming programs in high-risk communities. Screening is recommended for immunocompromised individuals or those from endemic regions before starting immunosuppressive therapy.

Traditional diagnosis involves microscopic detection of larvae in stool samples, duodenal fluid, or sputum, or blood tests for antibodies. PCR detection of this parasite can outperform traditional methods because it can provide sensitive, species-specific detection with minimal sample volume, even in complex matrices where viable eggs might be scarce or degraded (Campo-Polanco et al., 2018; Sanprasert et al., 2019).

Utilities:

  • Check for Strongyloides stercoralis in water sources, soil, and other environmental samples
  • Selection of appropriate remediation regimens
  • Check for post-remediation absense of this parasite
  • Help confirm the presence of this parasite in animals
  • Help minimize human exposure to this parasite

References:

Campo-Polanco LF, Sarmiento JMH, Mesa MA, Franco CJV, López L, Botero LE, Builes LAG. Strongyloidiasis in humans: diagnostic efficacy of four conventional methods and real-time polymerase chain reaction. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 2018 Jul-Aug;51(4):493-502.

Sanprasert V, Kerdkaew R, Srirungruang S, Charuchaibovorn S, Phadungsaksawasdi K, Nuchprayoon S. Development of Conventional Multiplex PCR: A Rapid Technique for Simultaneous Detection of Soil-Transmitted Helminths. Pathogens. 2019 Sep 16;8(3):152.

Specimen requirements: 2 ml of feces; or rectal swab; or 0.5 ml EDTA whole blood; or 10 ml of soil; or 10 ml of water, or used water filter media; or environmental swabs or swipes.

Contact Zoologix if advice is needed to determine an appropriate specimen type for a specific diagnostic application. For specimen types not listed here, please contact Zoologix to confirm specimen acceptability and shipping instructions.

For all specimen types, if there will be a delay in shipping, or during very warm weather, refrigerate specimens until shipped and ship with a cold pack unless more stringent shipping requirements are specified. Frozen specimens should be shipped so as to remain frozen in transit. See shipping instructions for more information.

Turnaround time: 2 business days

Methodology: Qualitative real time polymerase chain reaction

Normal range: Nondetected

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