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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Painful skin erosions and mucous sores in dogs with toxic epidermal

By Banovic, F et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2015·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical and microscopic characteristics of canine toxic epidermal necrolysis.

Species:
dog
Skin & coatDogs

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old female Labrador was brought in with severe skin problems, including painful red spots that turned into large sores all over her body. After examining her, the vet suspected a serious drug reaction called toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), which can be life-threatening. They took skin biopsies to understand what was happening, and found that the skin cells were dying due to an immune response. The vet identified that the medication carprofen might have triggered this reaction in her. With prompt treatment and careful monitoring, the dog was able to recover from this serious condition.

People also search for: dog skin sores treatment · toxic epidermal necrolysis in dogs · carprofen side effects in dogs

Abstract

Canine toxic epidermal necrosis (TEN), a rare and life-threatening cutaneous drug reaction, traditionally has been described as full-thickness devitalization of the epidermis with minimal dermal inflammation; however, few reports detail the histologic findings. We characterize the clinical features and histologic variations of 3 canine TEN patients. Clinically, irregular erythematous and purpuric macules evolved into widespread and severely painful erosions. The number of eroded mucosae varied; however, periocular and perilabial mucocutaneous junctions frequently were affected. Thirteen of 17 biopsies were evaluated. Apoptosis at multiple epidermal levels was the most common pattern of epidermal necrosis (12/13 biopsies, 92%). In contrast, full-thickness coagulation necrosis was present less often (7/13 biopsies, 52%). Lymphocytic interface dermatitis was the predominant inflammatory pattern, and intraepidermal lymphocytes, along with fewer histiocytes, were present to some degree in all samples along with lymphocytic satellitosis of apoptotic keratinocytes. The sequence of changes points to lymphocyte-mediated keratinocyte apoptosis as an early step in lesion development with subsequent variation in progression to coagulation necrosis among patients. Histopathologic changes overlapped with those reported for erythema multiforme, in contrast to traditional histologic descriptions of canine TEN. A specific algorithm for assessment of drug causality in epidermal necrolysis (ALDEN) was applied for each patient; carprofen was associated with a probable score for causality in 1 dog. Clinicians should be encouraged to take multiple biopsies in TEN suspect cases as nearly 25% of all biopsies lacked epithelium and were not diagnostic.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24907312/