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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

French Bulldogs with granulomatous colitis linked to invasive E. coli

By Manchester, A C et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2013·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Association between granulomatous colitis in French Bulldogs and invasive Escherichia coli and response to fluoroquinolone antimicrobials.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of six young French Bulldogs, all under one year old, were brought in for severe diarrhea with blood (hematochezia) that didn't improve with standard treatments. After tests, they were found to have a specific type of colitis linked to invasive E. coli bacteria. The dogs were treated with antibiotics, either enrofloxacin or marbofloxacin, for about 6 to 10 weeks, and they showed significant improvement within just a couple of weeks. All the dogs stayed healthy and symptom-free for several months after treatment.

People also search for: French Bulldog diarrhea treatment · granulomatous colitis in dogs · E. coli infection in puppies · fluoroquinolone for dogs

Abstract

BACKGROUND: French Bulldogs develop a form of granulomatous colitis (GC) with histopathological resemblance to GC of Boxer dogs (GCB). GCB is associated with mucosally invasive Escherichia coli whose eradication correlates with clinical remission. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: To characterize the clinical and histopathological features, presence or absence of invasive colonic bacteria, and response to fluoroquinolones in French Bulldogs with GC. ANIMALS: A total of 6 French Bulldogs with a histological diagnosis of GC. METHODS: Retrospective study of medical records. Bacterial colonization was evaluated using 16S rRNA probes for eubacteria and E. coli. Biopsy specimens from 3 dogs were cultured for bacteria. Clinical response to fluoroquinolone antimicrobials was determined. RESULTS: All dogs were ≤1 year of age with hematochezia that was refractory to empirical therapy. Clinicopathologic and fecal analysis did not reveal abnormalities. Abdominal ultrasound revealed patchy thickening of the colon in 4/5 dogs and regional lymphadenopathy in 5/5. Colonoscopic abnormalities included irregularly thickened and ulcerated mucosa, hyperemia, and overt bleeding in 4/6 cases. Multifocal accumulations of PAS-positive macrophages and intramucosal E. coli were present in colonic biopsies of all 6 dogs. Administration of enrofloxacin (5/6) or marbofloxacin (1/6) at 4.4-10 mg/kg (median 10 mg/kg) PO q24h for 6-10 weeks was associated with clinical improvement within 5-14 days. All dogs remained in remission over a 3-30 month follow-up period. CONCLUSIONS: Granulomatous colitis in young French Bulldogs is associated with the presence of invasive E. coli and closely parallels GCB. Treatment with fluoroquinolone antimicrobials can induce lasting clinical remission.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23206120/