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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Ferret with severe itching and skin scaling from distemper infection

By Zehnder, Ashley M et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2008·Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: An unusual presentation of canine distemper virus infection in a domestic ferret (Mustela putorius furo).

Species:
rodent
Skin & coat

Plain-English summary

A 4.5-year-old male ferret was brought in for severe itching, skin redness, and scaling that had lasted for 27 days. Despite treatment for scabies and secondary infections with various medications, the ferret only showed mild improvement and became less interested in food. After three weeks, the ferret was taken to the emergency vet due to severe blood loss and shock, but unfortunately, the owners chose euthanasia because of the poor prognosis. A post-mortem revealed that the ferret had canine distemper virus, which is unusual since it typically presents with respiratory or neurological symptoms. This case highlights that ferrets with skin issues that don’t respond to treatment should be evaluated for this virus, even if they have been vaccinated.

People also search for: ferret itching treatment · canine distemper in ferrets · ferret skin problems · ferret blood loss causes · ferret euthanasia decision

Abstract

A 4.5-year-old, male castrated ferret was examined with a 27-day history of severe pruritus, generalized erythema and scaling. Skin scrapings and a trichogram were negative for mites and dermatophyte organisms. A fungal culture of hair samples was negative. The ferret was treated presumptively for scabies and secondary bacterial and yeast infection with selamectin, enrofloxacin, fluconazole, diphenhydramine and a miconazole-chlorhexidine shampoo. The ferret showed mild improvement in clinical signs over the subsequent 3 weeks, but was inappetent and required supportive feeding and subcutaneous fluids by the owner. The ferret was then examined on an emergency basis at the end of 3 weeks (53 days following initial signs of illness) for severe blood loss from a haematoma over the interscapular region, hypotension and shock. The owners elected euthanasia due to a poor prognosis and deteriorating condition. On post-mortem examination intraepithelial canine distemper viral inclusions were identified systemically, and abundant canine distemper virus antigen was identified with immunohistochemical staining. It is important to note the prolonged course of disease along with the absence of respiratory and neurological signs because this differs from the classic presentation of canine distemper virus infection in ferrets. Canine distemper virus should remain a clinical suspicion for ferrets with skin lesions that do not respond to appropriate therapy, even in animals that were previously vaccinated.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18547381/