Leishmaniasis is endemic in 99 countries worldwide, including the United States of America (USA). Its causative pathogens, Leishmania spp. have been detected in both humans and animals within the USA. Lately, we have comprehensively reviewed autochthonous leishmaniasis in humans in this region. Animals play a pivotal role in maintaining its endemicity in some endemic areas and regions, for example, dogs in Brazil and the Mediterranean. In this review, we thoroughly examine autochthonous leishmaniosis in dogs, cats, horses, and wildlife in the USA, and we synthesize integration across species, transmission pathways, the crucial roles the animals play, and the potential risk they pose to humans. The information is essential for public health and for the effective control and management of leishmaniasis through expanding reservoir and vector surveillance using One-Health approaches in the USA.
Yao et al. (Mon,) studied this question.