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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Flat skin plaques on a horse linked to new papillomavirus type

By Munday, J S et al.·Published in New Zealand veterinary journal·2023·Department of Pathobiology·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cutaneous plaques associated with a putative novel papillomavirus type in a horse.

Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

A 6-year-old Thoroughbred mare developed flat, raised plaques on her left front leg, which were initially treated with a topical medication called 5-fluorouracil. These plaques went away after about four weeks, but new ones appeared five months later on a different part of her leg and resolved on their own within three months. Tests showed that these plaques were linked to a new type of papillomavirus, which is different from the typical warts seen in horses. This case highlights a new form of skin issue caused by a virus in horses, showing that not all skin lesions are the same.

People also search for: horse skin problems · papillomavirus in horses · mare skin plaques treatment

Abstract

CASE HISTORY AND CLINICAL FINDINGS: A 6-year-old Thoroughbred mare developed multiple flat plaques, < 1&#x2005;cm in diameter, on the left front fetlock. These were treated topically using 5-fluorouracil and resolved after 4 weeks. However, additional similar plaques developed on the left front pastern 5 months later. These lesions resolved within 3 months without treatment. PATHOLOGICAL AND MOLECULAR FINDINGS: One plaque that developed initially and one plaque that developed later were examined histologically. Both consisted of well-demarcated foci of moderate epidermal hyperplasia. Scattered throughout both plaques were cells showing evidence of papillomavirus-induced cell changes and the same papillomaviral DNA sequence was amplified from both lesions using PCR. As the novel sequence had 79.1% similarity to a partial sequence previously amplified from an equine cutaneous wart and 67.9% similarity to Equus caballus papillomavirus type 1, these results indicate detection of a putative novel papillomavirus type. DIAGNOSIS: Multiple cutaneous plaques due to infection by a novel papillomavirus type. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Unlike more typical equine cutaneous warts which generally appear as pedunculated and filiform masses, the lesions in this horse appeared as raised plaques. With the exception of aural plaques that are confined to the ears, localised clusters of papillomaviral plaques have not been previously described in horses. The lesions contained subtle histological evidence of papillomavirus infection and careful examination is required to differentiate these plaques from pre-neoplastic lesions. The plaques contained a putative novel papillomavirus type. These results increase the spectrum of papillomavirus-induced skin disease in horses.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36484093/