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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog on immune drugs develops skin infection from Alternaria fungus

By Dedola, Carla et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2010·The Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cutaneous Alternaria infectoria infection in a dog in association with therapeutic immunosuppression for the management of immune-mediated haemolytic anaemia.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 4-year-old English springer spaniel developed skin lesions while being treated for immune-mediated hemolytic anemia, a condition where the body destroys its own red blood cells. The dog had been on immunosuppressive medications, which can increase the risk of infections. Upon examination, the vet found multiple crusty and ulcerated skin lesions, as well as some oral lesions. Tests revealed a fungal infection caused by Alternaria infectoria. After stopping one of the medications and lowering the dose of the other, the skin lesions healed within 40 days, and the dog has remained healthy for over a year without any recurrence of the skin issues or anemia.

People also search for: dog skin infection treatment · immune-mediated hemolytic anemia in dogs · fungal skin lesions in dogs

Abstract

A 4-year-old, ovariohysterectomized, English springer spaniel on immunosuppressive therapy was re-examined for the review of its immune-mediated haemolytic anaemia and the recent development of skin lesions. For the 3 months since hospital discharge, the dog had been receiving 1.3 mg/kg prednisolone and 2.6 mg/kg ciclosporin, both administered orally twice daily. Physical examination revealed hepatomegaly and multiple, purulent, crusting, erosive to ulcerative lesions over different body areas. Onychorrhexis had occurred on one digit and the underlying corium had blackened. There were two proliferative and one plaque-like lesions in the mouth. Thick walled fungal hyphae were detected in impression smears from all skin lesions and staining with periodic acid-Schiff's stain confirmed the presence of multiple fungal hyphae and spores in all biopsies examined. Fungal culture isolated a heavy, pure growth of an Alternaria sp. which was identified as A. infectoria by sequencing the internal transcribed spacer 1 region of the rRNA gene. The animal's condition prevented detailed investigation of the oral lesions. Withdrawal of the ciclosporin and reduction of the prednisolone dosage resulted in spontaneous resolution of the skin lesions within 40 days. Further gradual decrements in the prednisolone dosage to zero were carried out without recurrence of the immune-mediated haemolytic anaemia. After 12 months, there has been no recurrence of either the skin lesions or the anaemia. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first reported case of A. infectoria infection in a dog.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20500496/