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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

A nodular granulomatous posthitis caused by Halicephalobus sp. in a horse.

Journal:
Veterinary dermatology
Year:
2008
Authors:
Muller, Stéphanie et al.
Affiliation:
Institute for Animal Pathology
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

This report discusses a 24-year-old warmblood horse that developed a condition called nodular posthitis, which is an infection causing lumps on the skin of the prepuce (the sheath covering the penis). The horse had a large, swollen mass that was partially ulcerated, and tests showed that it was caused by a type of roundworm called Halicephalobus gingivalis. Despite treatment with a medication called moxidectin and a topical ointment, the horse did not improve, and five months later, the mass was still there with the same type of worms present. This case is notable because the infection was quite extensive but remained localized, meaning it didn't spread to other parts of the horse's body. Overall, the treatment did not work as hoped.

Abstract

This report describes a case of nodular posthitis caused by Halicephalobus gingivalis in a 24-year-old warmblood horse. Macroscopic examination revealed a multinodular, partially ulcerated mass on the external lamina of the prepuce. Nematode migration from unfixed biopsy material in phosphate-buffered saline revealed adult nematodes with the typical morphological features of H. gingivalis: distinctive rhabditiform oesophagus with corpus, isthmus and bulb and the dorsoflexed ovary. The main histopathological features consisted of submucosal confluent granulomatous foci containing cross- and tangential sections of larval and adult nematodes surrounded by cellular debris, epitheloid macrophages, multinucleated giant cells, lymphocytes and plasma cells. Therapy including oral administration of moxidectin and local application of an ointment containing prednisolone and moxidectin was initiated but clinical response was poor. Five months later, the nodular mass was still present and histologically, the same lesions with numerous intact nematodes were identified. In the present case, a localized infection with granuloma formation in the area of the prepuce was observed. Clinically, it cannot be distinguished from other nematode infections or even from a squamous cell carcinoma. An accurate clinical examination followed by histopathological and parasitological examinations was necessary to establish the final diagnosis. This case is unusual in that the lesions were locally very extensive (10 cm), but they remained confined to the preputium and the nematodes did not spread haematogenously to other internal organs.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18177292/