Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Aspergillosis infection in a dog's genital tract
By Siemieniuch, Marta J et al.·Published in Animal reproduction science·2009·Department of Reproductive Immunology·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Aspergillosis of a dog genital tract-Case report.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 5-year-old male dog was diagnosed with aspergillosis, a fungal infection affecting his genital tract, which was found in his semen. To treat this condition, the veterinarian prescribed a combination of antibiotics and antifungal medications. After 12 weeks of treatment, tests showed no signs of the fungus, and the dog was able to mate successfully. However, complications arose during the pregnancies, leading to one termination and a severe infection in another female, highlighting the potential long-term effects of the infection despite the initial treatment success.
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Abstract
The information about aspergillosis locations in the reproductive organ is scarce. This short paper deals with aspergillosis in the dog genital tract with hyphae present in semen. There are two therapy schemes used in visceral mycoses, non-invasive treatment and surgical intervention. Considering the future reproductive career of the dog, we decided on antifungal drugs administration. Based on the microbiological results, we administered amoxycillin with clavulonate (Synulox 500mg, twice daily) orally. Itraconazole was used as an antimycological agent (Orungal, 100mg, twice daily) every other week. In 8th week of therapy no Aspergillus spp. growth was noted, yet slight Penicillium growth was observed. After 12 weeks of treatment, no fungus growth was present. Neither spores or hyphae were seen in the microscopic examination. Three months after the termination of the therapy, the dog mated with two females. In one case, unifetal pregnancy was diagnosed by ultrasound examination on day 42 after mating. Due to purulent discharge on day 45 after mating, the owner decided to terminate the pregnancy. In the other case, severe pyometra appeared 12 days after the second mating and the owner decided to put the female to sleep. The pathogen eradication from the ejaculates may be treated as a serious success, yet the lack of litters after mating calls for an explanation and consequences of Aspergillus spp. infection need to be considered.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18538514/