Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Draining skin sore with fungal infection in a young desert poodle
By Beaudin, Sylvie et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2005·Department of Veterinary Pathology, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Draining skin lesion from a desert poodle.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 16-month-old female Poodle in Arizona was brought in for coughing that lasted a few weeks and had a draining lesion on her front foot. Tests showed she had a fungal infection called coccidioidomycosis, caused by a fungus found in the desert. The vet confirmed the diagnosis by examining samples from the lesion and found bacteria and fungal endospores. Treatment typically involves antifungal medication, which can help clear the infection. With proper care, the dog can recover from this condition.
People also search for: Poodle coughing and draining lesion · coccidioidomycosis treatment for dogs · dog skin infection symptoms
Abstract
A 16-month-old intact female Poodle in Arizona had a history of intermittent coughing of a few weeks duration. Coccidiomycosis antibody screening test results were negative for immunoglobulin (Ig) M, but were positive (1:64) for IgG. Fine needle aspiration specimens of a draining lesion on the right palmar front foot contained large numbers of neutrophils, many of which contained bacteria, and lower numbers of macrophages. A few small structures also were observed, 2-5 microm in diameter with thin, nonstaining capsules and small, round to oval densely aggregated, eccentric nuclei. Cytologic findings were consistent with septic pyogranulomatous inflammation with Coccidiodes immitis endospores. Fungal culture of a sample from the draining lesion yielded white growth with barrel-shaped arthroconidia. Identification of the organism as C immitis was confirmed by a commercial DNA probe test. Although coccidioidomycosis often is diagnosed by microscopic identification of C immitis spherules in cytologic specimens, in this case only endospores, which are released from mature spherules, were observed. In cases of suspected coccidiodomycosis, the unique morphology of endospores may be useful in making a cytologic diagnosis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15732022/