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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Fungal ear infections in dogs compared to healthy ears

By Korbelik, Juraj et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2018·Department of Pathobiology, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Analysis of the otic mycobiota in dogs with otitis externa compared to healthy individuals.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with ear infections (otitis externa) had their ear swabs tested for fungal presence compared to healthy dogs. The results showed that the ears of the infected dogs had a much higher amount of a specific fungus called Malassezia, which was found in nearly all samples. In contrast, the healthy dogs had a wider variety of fungi. This suggests that ear infections in dogs may be linked to a decrease in fungal diversity, which could help veterinarians understand and treat these infections better.

People also search for: dog ear infection treatment · why does my dog have ear fungus · Malassezia in dogs

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Otitis externa is a common multifactorial disease with a prevalence in dogs as high as 10-20%. In humans, the diversity of the cutaneous mycobiota appears to increase in diseased states, whereas one canine study identified a decrease in diversity of the cutaneous mycobiota in atopic dogs compared to healthy individuals. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: To describe the otic mycobiota in dogs with otitis externa compared to healthy dogs. ANIMALS: Samples were collected from six dogs with clinical and cytological evidence of otitis externa and five clinically normal dogs. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Swabs were collected from the ears of six dogs with fungal otitis externa. DNA from each sample was isolated and Illumina sequencing was performed targeting the internal transcribed spacer region. Sequences were processed using the bioinformatics software MOTHUR. RESULTS: Fungi from ten different phyla were identified. The mycobiota of all affected ears was dominated by the genera Malassezia, which accounted for 55.7-98.4% of sequences (median 96.8%). Affected ears had significantly decreased observed richness, estimated richness and inverse Simpson's diversity index compared to controls (P = 0.008). Linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe) analysis identified 42 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) that were differentially abundant (P < 0.05). Three OTUs were over-represented in the affected ears, including M. pachydermatis, whereas 39 OTUs were over-represented in healthy ears. CONCLUSIONS: Reduced fungal richness and diversity was present in affected ears, with markedly higher relative abundances of Malassezia. The otic fungal mycobiota is much more complex than has been identified with culture-based studies.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30088292/