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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

CT scan features of non-skin pythiosis infection in 25 dogs

By Hamlin, Alessandra N et al.·Published in Veterinary radiology & ultrasound : the official journal of the American College of Veterinary Radiology and the International Veterinary Radiology Association·2024·Department of Molecular Biomedical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Computed tomographic characteristics of confirmed and presumed noncutaneous pythiosis in 25 dogs.

Species:
dog
Canine giardiasisStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 25 dogs with suspected pythiosis, a serious infection caused by a water mold, underwent CT scans to better understand the disease. Most of these dogs had gastrointestinal issues, showing thickened intestinal walls and lesions primarily at the ileocolic junction. Some dogs had infections affecting their arteries, leading to abnormal dilations. The scans revealed that many dogs also had swollen lymph nodes and fluid in their abdomen. The study suggests that CT scans can help veterinarians identify pythiosis, especially in younger dogs, and differentiate it from other conditions like tumors.

People also search for: dog pythiosis symptoms · CT scan for dog gastrointestinal issues · dog swollen lymph nodes treatment

Abstract

Pythium insidiosum is an aquatic oomycete that causes granulomatous infection in dogs, most commonly cutaneous and gastrointestinal. Ultrasonographic characteristics of gastrointestinal pythiosis have been described; occasionally, CT is utilized in the clinical setting, and CT features of pythiosis have not been published. The purpose of this retrospective, multicenter, descriptive study is to describe CT characteristics of noncutaneous canine pythiosis. The following CT parameters were recorded: lesion anatomic location, number, shape, margination, size, attenuation pre- and postcontrast, enhancement pattern, lymph nodes affected, other lesions identified, and presence of peritoneal effusion or steatitis. Descriptive statistics demonstrating the frequency of lesion appearances were performed. Twenty-five dogs with noncutaneous pythiosis lesions that underwent CT were included; 19 had primarily gastrointestinal infections, four primarily arterial infections, one intrathoracic and intra-abdominal infection, and one primary pulmonary infection. In dogs with primary gastrointestinal infection, lesions were most common at the ileocolic junction and were most frequently focal, well-defined, moderate to marked circumferential wall thickening that was homogeneous and smoothly marginated precontrast, with moderate heterogeneous contrast enhancement. Most dogs had involvement of multiple gastrointestinal regions. Of four dogs with primary arterial involvement, three had large aneurysmal dilatations of the cranial mesenteric artery with severe mural thickening. All dogs had regional lymphadenopathy, which was variable but generally mild. Nine dogs had peritoneal effusion; six dogs had steatitis. CT features of pythiosis can overlap with neoplasia, but pythiosis should be considered as a differential, especially in young dogs. Findings supported using CT as an adjunct imaging test for increasing clinical suspicion of noncutaneous pythiosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38192159/