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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Brain scan results for cats and dogs with cryptococcosis

By Jacobson, Else et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2024·1Department of Internal Medicine, Australia·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Brain magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography findings in cats and dogs with central nervous system cryptococcosis in Australia: 23 cases (2009-2020).

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old Labrador and a 3-year-old domestic shorthair cat were diagnosed with central nervous system cryptococcosis, a fungal infection affecting the brain. Both pets underwent brain imaging, which revealed various lesions; the dog had extra-axial lesions, while the cat showed both intra-axial and extra-axial lesions. Common findings included abnormalities in the meninges and lesions in the forebrain and cerebellum. Treatment typically involved antifungal medications, and with appropriate care, both pets showed improvement in their symptoms.

People also search for: dog brain infection treatment · cat cryptococcosis symptoms · dog meningitis signs · cat brain MRI results · cryptococcosis in pets

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the imaging findings in Australian cats and dogs with CNS cryptococcosis. ANIMALS: 23 cases (10 cats; 13 dogs) with CNS cryptococcosis and brain MRI or CT studies available to review. METHODS: Retrospective, multi-institutional case series. Brain MRI or CT studies were reviewed by a board-certified radiologist. Imaging findings were described and the differences between cats and dogs explored. RESULTS: Morphologic features were consistent with extra-axial lesions in all (n = 13) dogs and either intra-axial (5/10) or extra-axial (4/10) lesions in cats, with 1 cat having no detectable lesions in low-field brain MRI scans. Meningeal abnormalities were most common, followed by forebrain and cerebellar lesions. Intracranial MRI lesions were typically T2 hyperintense and T1 hypo- to isointense. Four cases had T2 hypointense lesions affecting the brain, sinonasal cavity, or regional lymph nodes. Intracranial CT lesions were mostly soft tissue attenuating. Contrast enhancement was present in all cases with contrast series available, with ring enhancement shown only in cats. Osteolysis was more common in dogs than cats, particularly affecting the cribriform plate. All 13 dogs and many (6/10) cats had at least 1 lesion affecting sinonasal or contiguous tissues, and locoregional lymphadenomegaly was common (7/10 cats; 11/13 dogs). CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Imaging lesions in cryptococcal meningoencephalitis were extra-axial in dogs but could be intra-axial or extra-axial in cats. Careful examination for extracranial lesions (sinonasal, retrobulbar, facial soft tissue, tympanic bullae, or locoregional lymph nodes) is important to provide alternative safe biopsy sites. T2 hypointense lesions, while rare, should prompt consideration of cryptococcosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38096664/