Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dermatophytosis in cats: ABCD guidelines on prevention and management.
- Journal:
- Journal of feline medicine and surgery
- Year:
- 2013
- Authors:
- Frymus, Tadeusz et al.
- Affiliation:
- European Advisory Board on Cat Diseases. tadeusz_frymus@sggw.pl
Plain-English summary
Dermatophytosis, commonly known as ringworm, is a fungal infection that affects cats, especially those that are young or have weakened immune systems. It is caused by a fungus called Microsporum canis and can spread easily, even from healthy cats that carry the fungus without showing symptoms. Typical signs include round patches of hair loss and flaky skin, and while many cats can recover on their own, those with compromised immune systems may experience more severe skin problems. Diagnosing this infection often involves examining the cat's fur under a special light or growing samples in a lab, but these methods can sometimes miss the infection. Treating dermatophytosis usually requires a combination of oral medications and topical treatments, along with thorough cleaning of the environment, especially in places like shelters where the infection can spread easily.
Abstract
OVERVIEW: Dermatophytosis, usually caused by Microsporum canis, is the most common fungal infection in cats worldwide, and one of the most important infectious skin diseases in this species. Many adult cats are asymptomatic carriers. Severe clinical signs are seen mostly in kittens or immunosuppressed adults. Poor hygiene is a predisposing factor, and the disease may be endemic in shelters or catteries. Humans may be easily infected and develop a similar skin disease. INFECTION: Infectious arthrospores produced by dermatophytes may survive in the environment for about a year. They are transmitted through contact with sick cats or healthy carriers, but also on dust particles, brushes, clothes and other fomites. DISEASE SIGNS: Circular alopecia, desquamation and sometimes an erythematous margin around central healing ('ringworm') are typical. In many cats this is a self-limiting disease with hair loss and scaling only. In immunosuppressed animals, the outcome may be a multifocal or generalised skin disease. DIAGNOSIS: Wood's lamp examination and microscopic detection of arthrospores on hairs are simple methods to confirm M canis infection, but their sensitivity is relatively low. The gold standard for detection is culture on Sabouraud agar of hairs and scales collected from new lesions. DISEASE MANAGEMENT: In shelters and catteries eradication is difficult. Essential is a combination of systemic and topical treatments, maintained for several weeks. For systemic therapy itraconazole is the drug of choice, terbinafine an alternative. Recommended topical treatment is repeated body rinse with an enilconazole solution or miconazole with or without chlorhexidine. In catteries/shelters medication must be accompanied by intensive decontamination of the environment. VACCINATION: Few efficacy studies on anti-M canis vaccines (prophylactic or therapeutic) for cats have been published, and a safe and efficient vaccine is not available.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23813824/