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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Blastomycosis lung and brain infection in two pet ferrets and their

By K. Le et al.·Published in Journal of Exotic Pet Medicine·2019·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: Diagnosis and long-term management of blastomycosis in two ferrets (Mustela putorius furo)

Species:
rodent
Breathing & cough

Plain-English summary

Two male ferrets, aged 4 and 1½ years, were brought to the vet for breathing problems and were diagnosed with a rare fungal infection called blastomycosis. After thorough testing, including imaging and cytology, both ferrets received antifungal medications and short-term steroids. Over the next few years, they showed improvement, but one ferret later developed central nervous system issues. Unfortunately, the older ferret was euthanized three years later due to unrelated cancer, but both ferrets had a good response to their initial treatment.

People also search for: ferret breathing problems · blastomycosis treatment in ferrets · ferret neurological signs · antifungal therapy for ferrets

Abstract

Abstract Background - Blastomycosis is an uncommon fungal infection endemic to certain parts of Eastern North America. Blastomycosis has been reported twice before in ferrets, but both cases died shortly after diagnosis. Case description - Two male neutered ferrets ( Mustela putorius furo ) from the same household, 4 and 1½-years of age, presented for respiratory signs. The diagnostic work-up included thoracic radiographs and ultrasound, advanced imaging, and cytology of a pulmonary mass, which led to a diagnosis of pulmonary blastomycosis in both cases. Both ferrets developed central nervous system (CNS) clinical signs. Ferret 1 developed signs referable to CNS lesions 3 months after initial presentation, and the second ferret 27 months after initial presentation. An MRI study and CSF analysis were performed on the first case. Both ferrets were treated with combinations of antifungal therapy and short-term prednisolone with a total follow-up period of 35 and 31 months respectively. Both cases responded favorably to antifungal therapy and supportive care. Response to therapy and the dynamics of infection were monitored with serial urinary Blastomyces antigen assays, thoracic radiographs, and routine bloodwork. The first ferret was euthanized three years after diagnosis due to an abdominal neoplasia. An exocrine pancreatic carcinoma, a cervical chordoma, and pulmonary blastomycosis were diagnosed on histopathology. Conclusions and case relevance - This report constitutes the first to document CNS blastomycosis in ferrets, long-term medical management of both pulmonary and suspected CNS blastomycosis in ferrets, and the use of serial urinary Blastomyces antigen assays to monitor disease progression in this species.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/8c8bf0eee474266a1058bd650e4f04a05e2b7dd2