Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Skin lumps and redness in dogs from reactive histiocytosis
By Palmeiro, Brian S et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2007·Department of Clinical Studies - Philadelphia, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Cutaneous reactive histiocytosis in dogs: a retrospective evaluation of 32 cases.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 4-year-old dog was brought in with skin problems, including nodules and swelling on the face and body. After treatment with medications like prednisone and tetracycline, the dog's skin lesions completely cleared up within about 45 days. While some dogs experienced a recurrence of the skin condition later, most remained healthy and free of lesions for over two years. Tetracycline combined with niacinamide was found to be particularly effective for treating this skin issue.
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Abstract
Thirty-two cases of canine cutaneous histiocytosis were retrospectively evaluated. Median age at onset was 4 years. Lesions included nodules and plaques affecting the head/face, trunk and limbs, and erythema, swelling and depigmentation of the nasal planum/nares. Systemic involvement was not ruled out in all cases. All dogs had complete resolution of dermatological lesions after initial treatment (median 45 days). Initial treatment included prednisone +/- antibiotics (12 of 32 dogs), prednisone and tetracycline/niacinamide (four of 32), prednisone and azathioprine (three of 32), tetracycline/niacinamide +/- vitamin E/essential fatty acids (six of 32), antibiotics +/- antihistamines (three of 32), cyclosporine and ketoconazole (one of 32), topical therapy (two of 32), and no treatment (one of 32). Seventeen dogs received maintenance therapy which consisted of tetracycline/niacinamide +/- vitamin E/essential fatty acids (12 of 17), cyclosporine/ketoconazole (two to three times a week) (two of 17), azathioprine daily (one of 17), prednisone/azathioprine (two times a week) (one of 17), and prednisone daily (one of 17). Median follow up was 25 months. Nine dogs had a recurrence of cutaneous histiocytosis (median days to recurrence 130 days), with seven of nine having more than one recurrence. At study completion, six dogs were deceased (no lesions at the time of death) and 26 of 32 were alive with no lesions. Ten of 26 dogs were on maintenance treatment (eight tetracycline/niacinamide, one azathioprine, one vitamin E). Previous dermatological disease and season had no detectable influence on recurrence. Recurrence was significantly more likely in dogs with nasal planum/nares lesions than dogs without these lesions. Tetracycline/niacinamide was an effective treatment option for dogs in this study population.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17845621/