“…Indeed, urinary capillariosis has often been regarded as having minor clinical and pathological significance, due to frequent subclinical presentations and limitations in its diagnosis (Otranto, 2015). However, in heavy parasite loads, P. plica may be responsible for severe lower urinary tract maladies, both in domestic (Rossi et al, 2011;Basso et al, 2014) and wild carnivores (Fernández-Aguilar et al, 2010;Bork-Mimm and Rinder, 2011;Alić et al, 2015). These urinary disorders generally include pollakiuria, dysuria and hematuria, may have chronic or recurrent clinical forms and do not improve after symptomatic or empirical antibiotic treatments (Senior et al, 1980;van Veen, 2002;Rossi et al, 2011).…”