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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Chronic moderate heat dermatitis (erythema ab igne) in five dogs, three cats and one silvered langur.

Journal:
Veterinary dermatology
Year:
2002
Authors:
Walder, Emily J & Hargis, Ann M
Affiliation:
Venice · United States

Plain-English summary

In this study, researchers found a rare skin condition called erythema ab igne, which happens when animals are repeatedly exposed to moderate heat. They observed this in five dogs, three cats, and one silvered langur, with the skin lesions usually appearing where the animals lay down near a heat source. The main signs included hair loss and redness in the skin, sometimes with darkened patches. The researchers noted specific changes in the skin cells under a microscope, indicating damage from the heat exposure. To prevent worsening of the skin condition, it's important to identify and change the heat source in the animals' environment.

Abstract

Erythema ab igne, an old and rare disease in the human literature, is an erythematous, often pigmented, reticular, macular dermatosis that occurs at the site of repeated exposure to moderate heat. We identified lesions consistent with erythema ab igne in five dogs, three cats and one silvered langur (Trachypithecus cristatus[Raffles, 1821]). In dogs and cats, the cutaneous lesion distribution typically reflected chronic exposure to moderate heat during lateral or sternal recumbency. The silvered langur developed cutaneous lesions on the dorsal neck from exposure to a heat lamp. Principal clinical lesions consisted of irregular areas of alopecia (7/9) and erythema (7/9), sometimes with hyperpigmentation (3/9). Principal histological features consisted of karyomegaly (9/9) and keratinocyte atypia (4/9), scattered apoptotic or vacuolated basal cells and/or apoptotic keratinocytes (6/9), mild mixed mononuclear interstitial or interface dermatitis (9/9) with adnexal atrophy (8/9), and a variable number of wavy eosinophilic elastic fibres (9/9). The presence of these cutaneous lesions in an animal indicates that the environment should be evaluated for exposure to chronic moderate heat, and the heat source should be eliminated or modified to prevent further exposure and progression of lesions.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12358613/