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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Nasal aspergillosis came back years later in Australian cattle dog

By Schochet, R A & Lappin, M R·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2005·Department of Radiology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Delayed recurrence of nasal aspergillosis in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 2-year-old female spayed Australian cattle dog was diagnosed with nasal aspergillosis, which caused symptoms like nasal discharge. Initially, she was treated with a topical medication called clotrimazole, but her symptoms returned after two months. The vet added an oral medication, itraconazole, but the dog developed a fever from it. After adjusting the dose and continuing with clotrimazole, her symptoms improved, and she remained symptom-free for four years. Unfortunately, she had a recurrence of nasal discharge, and after adjusting her treatment again, she was able to manage her symptoms without further fever episodes.

People also search for: dog nasal discharge treatment · Australian cattle dog nasal aspergillosis · itraconazole side effects in dogs

Abstract

A two-year-old, female spayed Australian cattle dog was diagnosed with nasal aspergillosis. The dog was treated topically with clotrimazole. Clinical signs recurred two months later and the clotrimazole treatment was repeated and 5 mg/kg itraconazole twice daily was added to it. The recommended dose of itraconazole for nasal aspergillosis is 5 mg/kg twice daily administered orally. The dog's symptoms completely resolved, but it developed an adverse febrile reaction to the Itraconazole. The Itraconazole was discontinued and the dog remained asymptomatic for four years. The dog then developed mucopurulent discharge from the right nostril and was diagnosed as having recurrent nasal aspergillosis. Itraconazole at 5 mg/kg twice daily was prescribed, which again induced a fever. When the itraconazole was decreased to 5 mg/kg once daily there were no fever episodes, but the nasal discharge was not completely resolved. The dog was then treated with topical clotrimazole Infusion, and maintained on 5 mg/kg itraconazole daily. To the authors' knowledge, this case is unique because of the delayed recurrence of nasal aspergillosis. Additionally, the idiosyncratic febrile reaction to the itraconazole has not previously been reported in the veterinary literature, but is similar to reports of drug-induced fever in humans.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15682737/