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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with colon inflammation from rare Basidiobolus arizonensis

By Annalise Black et al.·Published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science·2024·Department of Pathology & Microbiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Midwestern University, Glendale, AZ, United States, CH·View original on DOAJ

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Original publication title: Case report: Localized coloproctitis caused by novel Basidiobolus arizonensis in a dog

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 6-year-old male neutered boxer mix was brought to the vet after struggling with painful bowel movements, blood in his stool, and constipation for a month. Despite trying various treatments like special diets, antibiotics, and anti-inflammatory medications over several months, his condition worsened, leading to severe inflammation and draining sores around his rectum. Unfortunately, the dog was humanely euthanized after it became clear that he was not improving. A postmortem exam revealed a fungal infection caused by a newly identified species called Basidiobolus arizonensis, which is known to affect the gastrointestinal tract in pets.

People also search for: dog blood in stool · boxer mix constipation treatment · fungal infection in dogs

Abstract

A 6-year-old male neutered boxer mix canine was presented for a one-month history of dyschezia, hematochezia, and constipation. Colonoscopy and endoscopic biopsies revealed non-specific lymphoplasmacytic, eosinophilic colitis. Despite pursuing various therapies over a 3.5-month clinical course (including hypoallergenic diet, antibiotics, prokinetics, laxatives, and anti-inflammatory glucocorticoids), the patient’s condition did not improve. Two and a half months after initial presentation, the patient developed circumferential proctitis with multiple draining tracts and obstipation. Humane euthanasia and postmortem examination were elected. Gross and histological findings revealed locally extensive pyogranulomatous coloproctitis with many intralesional PAS-positive, GMS-negative 30–40 μm in diameter, hyaline, pauciseptate, irregularly branching fungal hyphae, hyphal bodies or chlamydospores and 25–45 μm in diameter thick-walled zygospores. Fungal culture of fluid from the draining tracts was performed, and DNA sequence analysis of the ITS and partial LSU of the nuclear ribosomal RNA genes were used to identify and confirm a novel species, Basidiobolus arizonensis. Basidiobolus spp. are saprobes in the order Basidiobolales and most commonly cause granulomatous infections of the skin, respiratory tract, and gastrointestinal tract in veterinary species and humans. To the authors’ knowledge, this is the first report of novel Basidiobolus arizonensis causing localized coloproctitis in a dog.

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Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2024.1427496